Quizzes & Puzzles5 mins ago
Eyes
Would like an opinion please. It is time for me to get my eyes tested and not a problem.
However I am finding if I drive at night the cars on the other side all feel as they have full beam on which of course I don't like.
Just out of opticians - lad gave me options
1. ie Next glasses could be tinted
2. Could be anti-glare
or
could have both of the above
Which one would be better - thanks for answers.
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by JinnyJoan. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If you're experiencing glare from the headlights of oncoming vehicles (where you've not done in the past), I'm amazed that the optician didn't mention cataracts. [Such glare is a classic symptom of cataracts].
My own optician hardly bothered to mention the very early stages of cataracts forming in both of my eyes but I still notice rather more glare when driving at night than I used to.
An anti-reflective coating on your lenses should help but many (most?) opticians include it as standard these days anyway. (Asda Opticans certainly do).
I bought those yellow tinted clip-ons once. B dangerous. May have dimmed poorly adjusted headlights (i.e. all of them) but dimmed everything else as well making it difficult to see anything.
I'm utterly convinced garages no longer bother dipping the lights towards the pavement. There should be random checks made.
I have worn the yellow night driving glasses for years and they've been excellent. The problem these nights is the latest headlights are pure white and these glasses don't react to them. I've made numerous enquires but it seems nobody has yet started to make glasses to cope with the extra brightness.
Like Buenchico, I immediately thought of cataracts. It's not so much light as fragmentation of light - making it almost impossible to see. I tried anti-glare specs on top of mine, which are photochromatic varifocals. Nothing worked. A couple of operations later and it is a different situation.
I still avoid driving at night, but that is down to loss of nerve and I am getting better - when it is dark I am more cautious, but can isolate oncoming headlights. Is there a possibility of cataracts?