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#1
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All,
I'm picking out a new pair of sunglasses for soaring and I had a few questions. Has anyone had problems seeing their PDA while flying with Polarized lenses? Is anyone flying with Oakley black iridium polarized lenses? Thanks, Michael 'BK' |
#2
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Perhaps risky, financially. My scree, an older IPAQ, is almost invisible
with a polarized lens. Paul ZZ On 4/4/2010 5:47 PM, Michael Reid wrote: All, I'm picking out a new pair of sunglasses for soaring and I had a few questions. Has anyone had problems seeing their PDA while flying with Polarized lenses? Is anyone flying with Oakley black iridium polarized lenses? Thanks, Michael 'BK' |
#3
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On Apr 4, 5:47*pm, Michael Reid wrote:
All, I'm picking out a new pair of sunglasses for soaring and I had a few questions. Has anyone had problems seeing their PDA while flying with Polarized lenses? I used to fly with polarized lenses. What I found is that you have to be careful that the polarizations of the screen and the lenses didn't interfere. For the LCD devices I flew with at the time (GPS-NAV screen, digital battery monitor), I pretty much got lucky and they worked fine. But I noticed that with some other devices, for example my FRS walkie-talkies, I had to hold the device sideways to read the display. Bottom line, I'd suggest taking the PDA with you when you try out the sunglasses. Thanks, Bob K. |
#4
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On Apr 4, 6:47*pm, Michael Reid wrote:
All, I'm picking out a new pair of sunglasses for soaring and I had a few questions. Has anyone had problems seeing their PDA while flying with Polarized lenses? Is anyone flying with Oakley black iridium polarized lenses? Thanks, Michael 'BK' Using an Ipaq 39xx and polarized Eagle Eyes I can see the screen fine. Gets rid of the glare. The glasses do not have a dark tint. What Bob said. |
#5
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Also, on a more general note:
Some canopy materials have bad interactions with polarized lenses. When I was training in a Diamond DA-20 I made the mistake of wearing polarized lenses once and was treated to a wonderful changing moire pattern all over the canopy, as I turned my head - ugh! So check your canopy as well as your PDA, before you drop a lot of dough on fancy lenses! --Noel |
#6
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"noel.wade" wrote in message
... Also, on a more general note: Some canopy materials have bad interactions with polarized lenses. When I was training in a Diamond DA-20 I made the mistake of wearing polarized lenses once and was treated to a wonderful changing moire pattern all over the canopy, as I turned my head - ugh! So check your canopy as well as your PDA, before you drop a lot of dough on fancy lenses! --Noel And last but not least, with polarized lenses reflections are suppressed. That means that you easely miss a sun reflection in the cannopy of an other glider. Missing other traffic means an increased risk of collission. No polarized glasses for me in the cokpit!! |
#7
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and you are banking that the next gee whiz flash bang gismo to come
down the line is not going to have a polarized screen that interferes with your sunglasses. I picked up a pair of prescription ray ban's a few weeks ago and decided to make life easy and got non polarized lenses. |
#8
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On 4/5/2010 1:27 AM, Jip wrote:
wrote in message ... Also, on a more general note: Some canopy materials have bad interactions with polarized lenses. When I was training in a Diamond DA-20 I made the mistake of wearing polarized lenses once and was treated to a wonderful changing moire pattern all over the canopy, as I turned my head - ugh! So check your canopy as well as your PDA, before you drop a lot of dough on fancy lenses! --Noel And last but not least, with polarized lenses reflections are suppressed. That means that you easely miss a sun reflection in the cannopy of an other glider. Missing other traffic means an increased risk of collission. No polarized glasses for me in the cokpit!! It is possible that you might miss a sun reflection on a glider. However, polarized gliders make the sky much darker, so in general they make other gliders stand out. They also help with the visibility of distant clouds. |
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On Apr 5, 10:28*am, Greg Arnold wrote:
On 4/5/2010 1:27 AM, Jip wrote: *wrote in message ... Also, on a more general note: Some canopy materials have bad interactions with polarized lenses. When I was training in a Diamond DA-20 I made the mistake of wearing polarized lenses once and was treated to a wonderful changing moire pattern all over the canopy, as I turned my head - ugh! So check your canopy as well as your PDA, before you drop a lot of dough on fancy lenses! --Noel And last but not least, with polarized lenses reflections are suppressed. That means that you easely miss a sun reflection in the cannopy of an other glider. Missing other traffic means an increased risk of collission. No polarized glasses for me in the cokpit!! It is possible that you might miss a sun reflection on a glider. However, polarized gliders make the sky much darker, so in general they make other gliders stand out. *They also help with the visibility of distant clouds. I wear a blue blocking polarized lens. The combination of blue blocking and polarizing significantly darkens large parts of the sky makes white gliders stand out and increases cloud contrast greatly, making wisps and haze domes visible as well. The downside is color shifts that may affect things like field choices in landouts in some situations, but you get used to this quickly. Moire patterns from stress in canopy can be a problem sometimes but with all the Meccaplex canopies I've flown with I have never seen a problem with this. One particular side window in my Tundra is another issue. Some powered aircraft windows with complex coumpount curvatures may be worse than glider canopies. Having a really good pair of sunglasses also cuts down on eye stain and makes you more likely to see other aircraft. The old chestnut about speculative reflection and it's importance in detecting other aircraft keeps coming up, the scientific report often cited for this is far from convincing. Darryl |
#10
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On 5 Apr, 01:47, Michael Reid wrote:
All, I'm picking out a new pair of sunglasses for soaring and I had a few questions. Has anyone had problems seeing their PDA while flying with Polarized lenses? Is anyone flying with Oakley black iridium polarized lenses? Thanks, Michael 'BK' You should be able to see your PDA wearing polarized sunglasses, but you may need to rotate your head though 90 degrees to read what's on the screen! Plain tints are probably better. Yellow to brown tints seem best at cutting through haze and highlighting clouds. Derek C |
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