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#26 |
Senior Member
Join Date: September 28, 2013
Posts: 3,411
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I don't know whether it will help, but it won't hurt to try. Your scope has fixed parallax, probably 100yd. Focus on the target. It may or may not be perfectly in focus depending on the distance. Now adjust the diopter on the eyepiece and keep check parallax by shifting head position slightly. You will find a setting that has no parallax, i.e. POA doesn't move when your head position varies. At this setting the reticle may be somewhat blurry, but it will be right on target.
This is not the kosher method. Better way is to have adjustable parallax. -TL Sent from my SM-N960U using Tapatalk |
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#27 |
Senior Member
Join Date: October 6, 2014
Posts: 730
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The new progressive glasses I just received have fixed the problem pretty well. It is a lot better now
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#28 | ||
Senior Member
Join Date: June 12, 2010
Posts: 479
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Quote:
I went through single vision glasses, bi-focals, tri-focals then to progressive and later cataract surgery. Regardless whether you use glasses or cataract surgery, do tell the eye doctor about your need to see the gun sights at specific distances, especially for pistol sights that are at two focal length distances (Hold your pistols and measure distance to front/rear sights and show these numbers to the eye doctor) because our bodies are different. Quote:
Regards to cataract surgery Intraocular Lens (IOL) implant options, you essentially have two major groups of monofocal and multifocal. Monofocal allows you distance vision but your near/mid vision is poor and will need glasses for reading up close and viewing your smartphone/computer screen. Multifocal allows you distance vision but also "improves" (Depending on IOL type/brand) near/mid vision that may require use of glasses for close up reading of fine print. And downside of multifocal IOL are "star burst/halo" effect over oncoming headlights for night driving and splitting of amount of light between distance and near/mid vision which affects night vision. After explaining to my eye doctor that I do a lot of driving at night and shoot pistols/scoped rifles, she suggested Vivity IOL implants, an upgraded multifocal with extended depth of focus that minimize "star burst/halo" effect and 100% light transmission for both distance/near vision with great mid range vision (Hands reach/computer screen/car dash distances) that helps with night vision. And I may only need reading glasses for close up reading of fine print - https://www.nvisioncenters.com/iol/vivity-vs-others/ It's been 2 years since my cataract surgery and 20/20 distance vision is maintained, there is no "star burst/halo" effect on headlights for night driving, mid vision is excellent (I can see everything inside the car, including dash) and can read restaurant menus without too much difficulty. (I only need reading glasses for really fine print like medicine bottle fine print) And of course, I can see my pistol sights clearly against clear target picture and using scopes for 50/100 yard shooting produces clear field of view picture to see 22LR holes on target. But this is one shooter's experience and your experience may vary based on your medical situation so definitely consult your eye doctor and research/educate yourself to make informed decision that you will use daily for the rest of your life (FYI, some patients have gone from monofocal/other brand multifocal IOL implants to Vivity with report of improvement. YMMV). BTW, here's repost from THR and hope this information can help others - https://www.thehighroad.org/index.ph...#post-12322678 "After looking at Symfony, Synergy and PanOptix multifocal intraocular lens (IOL) implant options, because I do a lot of night driving and look at computer/laptop/cellphone screens, my eye doctor recommended Vivity IOL - https://www.fda.gov/medical-devices....vivitytm-toric Last edited by BDS-THR; July 3, 2023 at 03:09 AM. |
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