Sunday, 12 August 2012

Best Glasses

source(google.com.pk)
Best Glasses Biography 
They’ve got a Terminator vibe, but there’s a lot more to them than just a badass look. In a little more than a decade, ballistic eyewear has become an essential part of a warrior’s combat kit. The simple reason: The high-tech glasses are cheap — and save hundreds of American eyeballs each year.
A study published in the Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection and Critical Care in April 2009 reviewed 3,276 casualties, finding that use of ballistic eye protection during current combat operations “resulted in significantly fewer and less severe ocular injuries.”
An Army Public Health Command briefing from the same year found that 94 percent of service members used eye protection on convoys and missions outside of forward operating bases.
The reason: It’s effective. In that same 2009 survey, 34 percent of service members said eye protection had saved their eye from an injury.
Revision Eyewear’s Desert Locust and Sawfly lenses can withstand a 48-pellet blast fired from a Mossberg M500 shotgun at a distance of 16 feet — with no penetration to the lenses, said Jonathan Blanshay, Revision’s president.
Revision is one of only a handful of manufacturers — along with ESS, Wiley X, Oakley and Sperian, among others — that produce military-approved ballistic eye protection. Through rapid fielding initiatives, military organizations and units now buy as many as two pairs of spectacles and one set of goggles for each deploying soldier, sailor, airman or Marine.
It hasn’t always been that way. During World War II, Korea and Vietnam, troops generally had eye protection only to help ward off environmental effects of the sun, wind and dust. Protection from flying fragments of anything from improvised explosive devices and grenades to tree bark was virtually nonexistent.
That all changed after the 1991 Persian Gulf War, Blanshay said, when officials began to recognize the potential ballistic battlefield threats — and the modern opportunities to prevent them.
Like others, Revision got its start in 2001 after the military had spent the better part of a decade developing the requirements and standards for high performance ballistic eyewear
When Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom kicked off — along with the challenges of unconventional warfare in Iraq and Afghanistan — the push for military-focused eye protection ramped up exponentially.
Early on, the military bought commercial, off-the-shelf, industrial- or sporting-focused eyewear. Although that gear offered some level of protection, it wasn’t ideal for a ground-pounder in a Kevlar helmet who also needed to sight in a Taliban fighter with his M16.
That’s where the new generation of ballistic eyewear filled a pressing need.
Using state-of-the-art optics and framing materials, today’s manufacturers build glasses and goggles that meet strict military requirements. They also provide a fit, function and comfort that gunslingers beg for, require and appreciate.
Since Revision produced the popular Sawfly line of specs in 2004, Blanshay said, 15 improvements have been made, including such troop-driven requests as better abrasion resistance, flame retardants and low-profile designs that are compatible with hearing protection as well as gas masks and night-vision goggles.
“The Army pays $45 a set for a piece of eyewear that lasts a year or more and can stop 90 percent of potential injuries just by wearing it,” Blanshay said. “We think it’s here to stay.”
Chris Lawson is a former Army Times managing editor who now works as a civilian strategic communications specialist for the Army.
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1 comment:

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