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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2016
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    Lebanon, TN
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    Safety Glasses

    I hope this is the correct forum for this question/thread.

    I'll be 62 tomorrow, up until two months ago I had near 20/20 vision in both eyes, only requiring the use of 1.5 readers for stuff up close.

    Just before Thanksgiving '18, I had shots in my eyes to slow the damage my type one diabetes is doing. Unfortunately one of those shots gave me a Staff infection, which lead to emergency surgery and ultimately a 75% loss of vision in me left eye.

    So now Safety Glasses have a very real new level of importance to me.

    I hate to admit that I only occasionally wear a full face shield, but do wear a respirator any time I'm cutting or sanding.

    So I'm looking for suggestions of where or how to get good set of bifocal safety glasses. Preferably a full size lens with the lower half set to a prescription level.

    I've never had any prescription glasses, so I'm not sure if this is something I should look into down at a Lenscrafters or the like.

    Thanks

    P.S. This latest condition may slow me down in my other favorite hobby (motorcycling), but I don't let it intend to get in the way of my woodworking.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
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    San Francisco, CA
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    Your first stop is with an optometrist. That's doc who examines your eyes, and gives you a prescription for lenses. You take that to an optician, who makes glasses for you from that prescription. In some states, the optometrist and the optician can be the same person. In other states, they have to be separate businesses. The optician can make any style of glasses for you, including bifocal safety glasses.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
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    McKean, PA
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    I would avoid the low cost "big box" eyeglass outlets. Product quality can vary widely. My wife and I recently decided to try one of the low cost place out of three pairs of glasses all of them had badly distorted lenses due to the lenses not fitting correctly in the frames. The lenses were fine until they were installed in the frames. The store refused to fix them as they claimed distortion was normal.

    Go to a professional opthomologist, that deals with safety glasses for industry and get genuine safety glasses with side shields.
    Last edited by Lee Schierer; 01-11-2019 at 11:29 PM.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2014
    Location
    Alberta
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    2,162
    I wear safety glasses that use an "optical insert" behind the safety glass lens. They are a wrap around style,the good thing is when the lenses get scratched up the safety part is like 13$ to replace. I have two pairs,clear and darkened for outdoors. I like these because I wear my glasses all the time and therefore my safety glasses are always on.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    River Falls WI
    Posts
    490
    I started buying my progressive bifocal glasses as safety glasses. I like them, besides that they are cheaper than regular glasses. I also do not forget to wear them. Dan

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2013
    Location
    Wayland, MA
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    3,668
    I have a pair of progressive bifocal safety glasses with side shields that I got through my job that work quite well and offer good protection because I wear them continuously in the shop. Glasses you don't wear are completely useless! Similarly plastic glasses you wear over your regular glasses tend to be uncomfortable and taken off, rendering them useless.

    Most discount sources don't offer real safety glasses, a real optician or specialty supplier should be able to get them for you. We have a guy in a truck who visits all around the area a couple times a month who is an excellent provider. By the time you get progressive lenses with all the anti-scratch coatings be prepared for a bit of sticker shock, my last pair was over $400. Compared to an eye injury that's nothing, of course.

    The best safety glasses are the ones you will wear -- all the time, without fail. While there are obviously hazardous situations that require a lot of protection, eg face shields while turning or grinding, many eye injuries happen due to "freak occurrences" that happen when you are doing things you don't regard as dangerous. Comfortable, high quality eyewear rated for impact that you can and will keep on all the time is the best protection. Don't forget the side shields! You come to ignore them pretty quickly and they increase the protection level quite a bit.

    images-2.jpeg

  7. #7
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    Mar 2006
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    SoCal
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    Sorry to hear of your journey. I pretty much avoid bargains in brain surgery, parachutes and eye care. I went the direction with the most coverage I could get. I also wear glasses outside the shop but, these are safety rated frames (designed for frontal impact) and impact resistant lenses.

    Safety-001.jpg

    Not a great fashions statement this side of the 1970's but, comfortable enough that I will suddenly notice I am still wearing them while out at the grocery store .

    Unfortunately there is a trend toward bargain eye wear just as you can get your teeth straightened through the mail. Do yourself a favor, seek out a well recommended optometrist, get a good exam and a proper pair of specs. Reduced vision in one eye will foul your depth perception and reduce your light intake. Both can cause what would be a minor boo-boo in the living room to become an injury in the shop. Your brain will eventually make up for this pretty well, I speak from experience. Take extra care until things balance out.
    "A hen is only an egg's way of making another egg".


    – Samuel Butler

  8. #8
    Like Glenn and Roger I wear specs all the time, safety rated frames with scratch resistant high impact plastic lenses and removable side shields that I get through my optometrist/optician's office.. There's a pretty good variety of frames available. They are expensive, over $400 with photochromic lenses, but well worth it for me. I am not great at remembering to don the side shields, but the fact that I always have them on has saved me untold misery several times. In one incident years ago I dropped a drill with a 1/4" bit chucked up on the floor. The drill bit broke, ricocheted and cracked a lens, but no injury resulted. I have worked with many people whose vision didn't require correction, and most of them wore safety glasses rarely- not a good risk especially if one eye is already compromised.

  9. #9
    You might pay attention to how the frames fit around your nose, my safety glasses close things off pretty well, but my readers do not. I have gotten tiny specks in my eye while wearing my readers.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Location
    East Texas
    Posts
    230
    In my experience many optical companies are no longer providing prescription safety glasses, apparently out of concerns about liability issues. When I purchased my last pair, I found Walmart was the only place I could get them. I admit that If I was willing to drive 50 miles to Seattle I might have had different results.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Location
    Hatfield, AR
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    1,170
    Get your prescription then visit https://www.zennioptical.com/b/goggles
    -Lud

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Sep 2016
    Location
    Central Missouri, U.S.
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    1,263
    I've tried Zenni and one other online company, although not for protective glasses, and I won't do it again. The low price is, obviously, tempting. The service after the sale was non-existent.

    In both cases, I was using my current prescription, a prescription that works great on the glasses from my local eye doc. In both cases, there was distortion that was not seen with my local glasses. In both cases, they said sorry, but we followed the script you sent us.

    For me, lesson learned.

  13. #13
    You can get wrap-around safety glasses with a bifocal reading lens for less than $20. I think the big box stores have them, I order them from Amazon.

    Bob Lang

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Lawrenceburg, Tenn.
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    1,133
    Your optometrist should be able to make you a pair safety glasses that work for your Rx whatever it is.

    Doc
    As Cort would say: Fools are the only folk on the earth who can absolutely count on getting what they deserve.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Jul 2017
    Location
    Abilene, TX
    Posts
    109
    My suggestion is like many others here, I wore corrective lens for 37 years and I fly airplanes for living, I got to a point that I needed trifocals to have distant and visision at 12 inches over my head to read the over head panel, then 18 inches to see the Instrument panel in front of me.

    I opted for lasic surgery (I am not suggesting you do that it is what I did at age 46) that solved all of my problems, Having worn glasses since the elementary school I was use to having something in front of eyes all those years, after the surgery it was great not having obstruction to my vision such as the frames of the glasses. When I was
    In the shop I had to get in the habit of wearing safety glasses, real safety glasses not the polycarbonate type that look cool that you can by for $8.00 at the big box store.
    I am glad I did have real safety glasses, I was doing something stupid with the table saw cutting a 4 inch log, and forgot to put in the riving knife, I should have been using a band saw but I did not have one. I also should have been using a miter sled, but I was not. I got a kick back and that wet hickory Chung of wood hit me square between the eyes and on the nose.
    I saw stunned, and in a daze. The first thing I did was stop the saw then After regaining my assessment abilityies, I reached for my nose to expect a bloody gooey mess. To my relief no blood, no real visual trauma. My nose was acheing pretty bad. I called for my wife we placed a bag of frozen peas’s on face, that kept the swelling down.

    i sat in a chair and just reflected on what had happened, and how lucky I was.
    A few minutes latter I went to the shop to look at my safety glasses, the glasses had obsorbed at lot of impact and spread the energy to the bridge of my nose. Looking at glasses I saw smudge mark that was about 1/4 in diameter inline with my right eye. Looking at the log it had a stob protruding from the log 1/2 to 3/4 of and inch long. Had I been wearing the cheap safety glasses I could have lost my eye,

    So my suggestion is look for proper Safety Glasses I am glad I did.

    Lane

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