Lost my sunglasses - Suggestions please!
Discussion
I have lost my Oakley 'Gascan' Polarised HD sunglasses, and I am annoyed at this because;
a)They cost me £140.
b)I only had them for about 12 months.
c)I really hate losing stuff!
I have some metal rimmed RayBan's for wearing with smarter clothes, but for driving, cycling, holidays etc I felt the Oakley's were ideal as I found them to be optically excellent. The clarity and glare reduction seemed very good.
I don't really want to spend another £140 on some plastic sunglasses, but I do need to replace them, so can anyone recommend anything that will be very good in the optical department but maybe a little lighter on price?
I had a look at some polarised Bloc sunglasses (think they were the Delta model which looked quite like my Oakleys) and they were £40 which seemed suspiciously cheap to me, but maybe I've just been conned by the price of others in the past??
Over to you
a)They cost me £140.
b)I only had them for about 12 months.
c)I really hate losing stuff!
I have some metal rimmed RayBan's for wearing with smarter clothes, but for driving, cycling, holidays etc I felt the Oakley's were ideal as I found them to be optically excellent. The clarity and glare reduction seemed very good.
I don't really want to spend another £140 on some plastic sunglasses, but I do need to replace them, so can anyone recommend anything that will be very good in the optical department but maybe a little lighter on price?
I had a look at some polarised Bloc sunglasses (think they were the Delta model which looked quite like my Oakleys) and they were £40 which seemed suspiciously cheap to me, but maybe I've just been conned by the price of others in the past??
Over to you
Willy Nilly said:
£20 is more than enough for shades. They cost about £1 to make.
I kind of agree which is why I started this thread, to see what else was out there as have really only ever experienced RayBan, Oakley and a couple of others.You would hope that a company like Oakley genuinely would put far more resources into making top quality lenses than cheaper brands, or is it just marketing bullst?
Apparently my Oakleys had 'Pluntonite High Definition' lenses which are allegedly 'one of the most optically pure materials used in eyewear today that filters 100% of UVA, UVB, UVC and blue light up to 400nm'
I'm not 100% sure I buy all that sales patter...
Edited by NinjaPower on Saturday 28th March 16:52
Ordered some from here last year:
http://www.melonoptics.co.uk/sunglass/
Great quality and around £30. Didn't survive the dog chewing on them so need to order some more!
http://www.melonoptics.co.uk/sunglass/
Great quality and around £30. Didn't survive the dog chewing on them so need to order some more!
Your in luck the UK Oakley outlet is having a sale on their already cheap prices. http://www.eyewearoutlet.co.uk
(No I don't work for them just a long term happy customer)
They have a shop in gunwharf, Portsmouth with some designs even cheaper in store if your local. You will also often find them at big shows like the festival of speed. I think I saved about £140 on my radar locks.
(No I don't work for them just a long term happy customer)
They have a shop in gunwharf, Portsmouth with some designs even cheaper in store if your local. You will also often find them at big shows like the festival of speed. I think I saved about £140 on my radar locks.
I think I've lost my Oakley Oil-Rig MasterCraft Signature Series glasses.
Annoying!
ETA: what I came here to post.
I lost a pair of Oakley goggles last time I went skiing and replaced them with Julbo which seem very good and a lot cheaper. If their glasses are as good it might be worth looking them up.
Annoying!
ETA: what I came here to post.
I lost a pair of Oakley goggles last time I went skiing and replaced them with Julbo which seem very good and a lot cheaper. If their glasses are as good it might be worth looking them up.
Edited by RobinBanks on Saturday 28th March 19:58
NinjaPower said:
I kind of agree which is why I started this thread, to see what else was out there as have really only ever experienced RayBan, Oakley and a couple of others.
You would hope that a company like Oakley genuinely would put far more resources into making top quality lenses than cheaper brands, or is it just marketing bullst?
Apparently my Oakleys had 'Pluntonite High Definition' lenses which are allegedly 'one of the most optically pure materials used in eyewear today that filters 100% of UVA, UVB, UVC and blue light up to 400nm'
I'm not 100% sure I buy all that sales patter...
Got to be PR bullst, hasn't it. My Oakleys are made of Unobtainium.You would hope that a company like Oakley genuinely would put far more resources into making top quality lenses than cheaper brands, or is it just marketing bullst?
Apparently my Oakleys had 'Pluntonite High Definition' lenses which are allegedly 'one of the most optically pure materials used in eyewear today that filters 100% of UVA, UVB, UVC and blue light up to 400nm'
I'm not 100% sure I buy all that sales patter...
Edited by NinjaPower on Saturday 28th March 16:52
Actually need some new lenses as they've started peeling apart. Sand and water damage I suspect, not poor quality.
HRL said:
Got to be PR bullst, hasn't it. My Oakleys are made of Unobtainium.
Actually need some new lenses as they've started peeling apart. Sand and water damage I suspect, not poor quality.
It has been discussed many times on PH why oakleys are expensive. Actually need some new lenses as they've started peeling apart. Sand and water damage I suspect, not poor quality.
Watch this: http://youtu.be/c_GL9XNjcBI and you will see against some well known brands the impact tests that oakleys are superior - this will add cost.
And here's a more recent video covering more things like the lens technologies: http://youtu.be/bpSNYVd85JU
And more modern stress testing: http://youtu.be/zcXbpwAIAlA
It's not all money on PR
Edited by ecsrobin on Saturday 28th March 20:21
ecsrobin said:
Your in luck the UK Oakley outlet is having a sale on their already cheap prices. http://www.eyewearoutlet.co.uk
(No I don't work for them just a long term happy customer)
They have a shop in gunwharf, Portsmouth with some designs even cheaper in store if your local. You will also often find them at big shows like the festival of speed. I think I saved about £140 on my radar locks.
Really appreciate that link! (No I don't work for them just a long term happy customer)
They have a shop in gunwharf, Portsmouth with some designs even cheaper in store if your local. You will also often find them at big shows like the festival of speed. I think I saved about £140 on my radar locks.
I had no idea there was a cut price UK Oakley outlet. I generally avoid even looking for web based sunglass outlet type places as they are almost always fake/scam places.
I buy cheap safety sunglasses from our local builders' merchant. I've found nothing better for driving, mountain biking etc and at £3.99 a pair I can afford to loose or sit on a few pairs a year. I honestly can't see why anyone would buy Oakley etc
http://www.jewson.co.uk/tools-fixings-ironmongery/...
http://www.jewson.co.uk/tools-fixings-ironmongery/...
ecsrobin said:
It's not all money on PR
Didn't really make myself clear. I was referring to Plutonite and Unobtanium rather than anything else. Real materials I know, but the names sound like they're straight out of a comic book. Edited by ecsrobin on Saturday 28th March 20:21
Amazing clarity with their lenses though and the frame I've got seems bombproof.
Tidybeard said:
Zod said:
Try a pair of Maui Jims and be amazed that not everything written in this thread is true.
Seconded. Absolutely fantastic and a clear step above Oakley. Serengeti Drivers are great for, er, driving too. Oakley are decent but you owe it to yourself to try the first two.However I'm very tempted on clicking the button on some polarised persol 714's
Gassing Station | The Lounge | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff