Members Mungo Posted May 29, 2014 Members Report Posted May 29, 2014 I'm trying to determine which lense power to get, and was wondering if anyone uses these. If so, which lense do you have? I realize this is very subjective, but if there is a consensus, then I'll go with that. Thanks. Quote
Members BigJake Posted May 29, 2014 Members Report Posted May 29, 2014 Mungo, Mine are 4x and that's about right for me for carving, gunstock checkering. etc. Mine came from Enco about 20 years ago so I don't know if they still carry them. Quote
Members camano ridge Posted May 30, 2014 Members Report Posted May 30, 2014 I willbe down in the shop later this evening I don't remember the brand on mie I think I got themat Woodcrafters and they came with interchangable lenses I think 3 or 4 different lenses. Quote
Members CTaylorJr Posted June 1, 2014 Members Report Posted June 1, 2014 No name brand with a 3.5x magnification. Works pretty good, but not as crisp as the actual Optivisor I wear at my father's. Quote
Members Not Awl Together Posted June 1, 2014 Members Report Posted June 1, 2014 My Optivisor has a 3x lens, seems to be about right when I need it. I wear tri-focal glasses to correct for being farsighted so your needs may differ. Quote
Members jfdavis58 Posted June 2, 2014 Members Report Posted June 2, 2014 This is a question I faced at one point. I do a variety of hand-crafts and already wear bifocals so which power is best? I had a cheap visor from I don't know where so... Lucky for me there is a lot of hand crafting in my area and people are generally open to letting you try things if you show a respectful interest. In the end I went to a place called Rio Grande (Jewelry Supply) and bought the whole kit: visor, 2,3,4,5,7 &10X, loupe (forget the magnification-but I bought an extra to use both eyes) and a relatively hard plastic case to store everything. There is also a battery powered light. Seemed pricy at the time ($200+a little), but totally indispensable now. I use the 2X and 3X for all kinds of normal distance work including carving and tooling leather. They work pretty good when the work is 14-18 inches from my face with a depth of field that keeps tools scattered around the work area in discernible clarity. By the time you cycle to the 10X the depth of field is about 1/4 inch and the focal distance is 2-3 inches from the eye; but I can see small nicks and tarnish on blade edges! I use the loupe the least but I just checked the instruction sheet for X. It's 2.5 times more magnification. Rio Grande ships fast and the cost is reasonable. Quote
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