I use those little half moon shaped lenses in the bottom part of the mask lense.
1.5 and I can read my gauges easily!
Cost about £20 for a pair.
I wear daily disposable contact lenses. never had a problem diving with them
Paul
I use those little half moon shaped lenses in the bottom part of the mask lense.
1.5 and I can read my gauges easily!
Cost about £20 for a pair.
I wear daily disposable contact lenses. never had a problem diving with them
Paul
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I sent my prescription to SDS along with my Beaver Atomic mask with the pupil centres marked on the outside and a cheque for £80 +P&P and they sent me back my mask fitted with lenses in 8 days
Well worth it. I can now read the numbers in the bottom of the SLR viewfinder![]()
Gareth
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I spoke to the optician about lenses for my mask and what she wrote on the prescription "Diving mask -3.50 slight compromise distance to aid near vision". My old prescription for my contacts were -3.50 and I couldnt see my DC so what she is prescribing for a mask will be no good.
My new prescription for spectacles is
SPH CYL AXIS Near ADD Inter ADD B
R 4.25 +1.50 +0.50
12.00
L 4.75 +0.75 25.0 +1.50 +0.50
SO if I get stick on lens (near vision) to go onto a prescription mask (distance vision) what sort shall I get? 1.25/1.50/2.0/2.5 definitley not 3.50 as I know I cant see.
Cheers for your patience.
Last edited by yazzyfooty; 15-07-08 at 04:46 PM. Reason: TESTICLES those numbers on top line are not going under the correct columns
Go to Boots.
Try on their reading glasses
Look at the Px
reduce it by 0.25 (magnifction in water)
Order the stick in lenses (GO-Dive stock them)
Some people are born weird, some achieve it, others have weirdness thrust upon them....
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Yazzy
I see you have had contacts before. I suggest you do go back to them but explain you have a special need to see close to. In my very recent experience they will issue you with a set to try out then and there to prove it. An adjustment will be made to allow for this. You wont have to fitout a second spare mask with lenses that can get damaged or that you could lose.
Wibble
Thank you all for your advise.
I do as well. I buy them from the US and they're a lot cheaper than UK prices. I keep a spare pair in my tool box just in case I lose one and there's always a set in the car. I've done 3-4hr dives and never had a problem wearing lenses (though doesn't mean I won't). It isn't hard to blink one out once you're used to them if there is any trouble.
I'm -6 and was really surprised at how much correction I got with no lenses underwater. I'd be happy to dive without them if I had to. Ok, maybe not happy...
Cheers,
Stuart
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Yo bud, try either varifocal contact lenses, or monovision (one eye for distance vision, the other near, for your computer). Go to Specsavers, they have the best prices. I choose to use daily contact lenses, use and throw away afterwards.
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Get down to Specsavers and ask for some iseikonic magnifying specs.