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My "prescription" visor

Posted: Sat Jan 14, 2017 6:30 am
by Evan1701
This is a little out of the ordinary, but hey, it works. I had a couple extra lenses laying around from an old pair of glasses. Thank goodness I'm one step from being a hoarder, otherwise I may have thrown them out years ago. Since I'm getting my ROTS Royal Guard approved sometime in the next few weeks and plan to do my first troop in about a month, I figure I need to make sure I can actually see out of my helmet (barring the obvious FOV limitations we all experience). A few pieces of tape later, and voila. A ghetto "prescription" visor.

http://imgur.com/gallery/Lkjjf

I mostly just taped them in as a proof of concept. I will end up either hot glueing or super glueing them in. Surprisingly, I can't actually see the tape at all, but I don't want them to fall out if the adhesive decides to fail on a summer day.

A better solution might be to just get contacts, but I can barely put eyedrops in as it is!

:tr:

Re: My "prescription" visor

Posted: Sat Jan 14, 2017 9:14 am
by LuciousTalvloinne
If it works for you and helps with your mobility all the better. The smoked lense hides the eyes of the costumer. That will not affect any approval issues as it is an internal modification.

Re: My "prescription" visor

Posted: Sat Jan 14, 2017 7:59 pm
by Evan1701
I eventually want to swap it out to a mirrored red visor. There are a LOT of mods I want to do, but I want to get some "boots on the ground" time so I can really determine what works and what doesn't (since I haven't trooped yet). I also want to determine when I want to spend more $$$ on the Royal Guard costume vs. starting to build a new one. Hoping for some May the 4th deals :D

Re: My "prescription" visor

Posted: Mon Jan 16, 2017 9:19 pm
by cooldevo
Depending on how much space you have inside the helmet a pair of sports glasses could work just as well. The benefit of the sports ones is they tend to wrap snugly around the face as opposed to the edges you find on normal glasses. I too am not a fan of contacts/drops. They often have anti-fogging properties as well, which is very nice.

That's what I use, but of course it will depend on your prescription to see if it is doable. I got mine from a website online out of the US. They also work very nicely inside my Vader helmet.

Re: My "prescription" visor

Posted: Mon Jan 16, 2017 9:52 pm
by Evan1701
I can get some prescription safety glasses through work, but I'm not sure if they're as compact as sports glasses. If they are that would definitely be a better end goal.

Re: My "prescription" visor

Posted: Wed Jan 18, 2017 2:38 pm
by cooldevo
You could affix lenses to the RG lens, but the tricky part is you'd have to ensure the power is adjusted for where they'd be sitting so you can focus properly.

Glasses lenses have a power based on being ~12 millimeters from your eyes. The RG visor is more than 12mm from your eye. Thus regular glasses lenses sitting further away would need their power adjusted. For proper vision, you'd want the lenses power adjusted to ensure that they compensate for the extra distance from your eye. Otherwise you'd likely end up with headaches, motion sickness, or sore eyes after using the helmet for a while.

Lots of resources online that you can reference that talk about prescription lenses (glasses and contacts) and distance from eye. One reference: http://www.allaboutvision.com/eyeglasse ... iption.htm

Re: My "prescription" visor

Posted: Thu Jan 19, 2017 10:28 pm
by Evan1701
cooldevo wrote:You could affix lenses to the RG lens, but the tricky part is you'd have to ensure the power is adjusted for where they'd be sitting so you can focus properly.

Glasses lenses have a power based on being ~12 millimeters from your eyes. The RG visor is more than 12mm from your eye. Thus regular glasses lenses sitting further away would need their power adjusted. For proper vision, you'd want the lenses power adjusted to ensure that they compensate for the extra distance from your eye. Otherwise you'd likely end up with headaches, motion sickness, or sore eyes after using the helmet for a while.

Lots of resources online that you can reference that talk about prescription lenses (glasses and contacts) and distance from eye. One reference: http://www.allaboutvision.com/eyeglasse ... iption.htm
Wow, excellent info! They worked pretty well when I was having my approval/other pics taken in my costume, but out on a troop is the last place I would want to get a blistering headache. I think I'm just going to take the leap and get contacts. I'll probably need them with the other costumes I want to build!

Re: My "prescription" visor

Posted: Fri Jan 20, 2017 3:11 am
by cooldevo
That would work also!

You may not end up with any problems at all, and it may work out perfectly for you to have them mounted inside the visor. The only way to find out would be to try it on a troop. I'm definitely no optometrist or ophthalmologist, I just read what I research. ;)