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TRANSCRIPT
www.norville.co.uk
JUBILEE YEAR 2012
E -Edition 7
ophthalmic lens
technical reference
PRESCRIPTION
COMPANION
©2012Transitions Optical inc.
The Norville Rx Companion2
TOPIC Page(s)
Index 2 - 3
Lens Shapes 4 - 6
Effective Diameter Chart 7
Simplify Rx 8
Ophthalmic Resins 9
Indices of Ophthalmic lenses - Resin 10
Polycarbonate 11
Trivex 12 - 13
Resin Photochromic Lenses 14
Transitions Availability Check List 15
Nupolar Polarising Lenses 16
Drivewear Lenses 17 - 18
UV Protective Lenses 19
Norville PLS Tints 20
Tinted Resin Lenses 21
Mid and High Index Resins Tintability 22
Norlite Tint Transmission Charts 23 - 25
Norlite Speciality Tinted Resins 26 - 31
Norlite Mirror Coating 32
Reflection Free Coating 33 - 34
F.A.Q. Reflection Free Coatings 35 - 37
Indices of Ophthalmic Lenses - Glass 38
Glass Photochromic Lenses 38
Speciality Absorbing Glass 39
Speciality Tinted Glass 40
Companion Tint Transmission Charts 41
Resin Bifocal & Trifocal Availability 42
Lenses for the relief of Heterophoria 43
Lenses for the relief of Anisometropia 44 - 45
Prism Controlled Lenses 46
Norbond 47
TOPIC Page(s)
Part II Rx Allsorts
Lens Forms 49
Base Curves 50 - 51
Aspherics 52 - 53
Free-form Digital Design 54
Compensated Lens Powers 55 - 56
Intelligent Prism Thinning 57 - 58
Superlenti - Glass 59
Superlenti - Resin 60
V Value / Fresnels 61
E Style Bifocal / Trifocal 62
Photochromic / Glazing / Prisms 63
Lens Measures 64
Sports 65
3D Technology Overview 66
Rx Ordering 67
Order Progress 68
Rx Order Form 69
Queries 70
Optical Heritage 71
Rx House - Change afoot? 72 - 73
Remote Edging 74
Remote edging - F.A.Q. 75
Quality Assurance 76
Optical Standards 77
Protective Eyewear 78
Optical Chart Addenda
Resin - Edge Substance Comparison A1
Resin - Centre Substance Comparison A2
Glass - Substance Comparison A3
Introduction and Page Index
The Norville Companion is a supporting publication for our Prescription Catalogue,
providing further technical details, hints and ideas gleaned from everyday experiences.
The Norville Rx Companion 3
Optically useful websites:
Association of British Manufacturing Opticians www.abdo.org.uk
A.B.D.O. College www.abdocollege.org.uk
Corning - SunSensors™ www.corning.com
Drivewear® Lenses www.drivewearlens.com
European Hard Resin Institute www.hardresin.com
Federation of Manufacturing Opticians www.fmo.co.uk
Ophthalmic Antiques International Collectors’ Club www.oaicclub.com
The Norville Group Limited www.norville.co.uk
Worshipful Company of Spectacle Makers www.spectaclemakers.com
Younger - Transitions® - NuPolar® www.youngeroptics.com
Text books mentioned throughout the Norville Rx Companion are available from the Norville Bookshop
TOPIC Page(s)
Part III Dispensing Update
The Versatile Reading Lens 83
Fitting Guide to Enhanced Reading Lenses 84 - 85
Occupational Progressive Powered Lenses 86
Progressive Lenses 87 - 88
Successful Varifocal Dispensing 89
Progressive Lenses: The latest generation 90 - 91
Prescription for success 92 - 95
Compensating Wrap-around Frames 96 - 97
TOPIC Page(s)
Part IV Specific Selling Advice
Selling Points - Polarised Lenses 99
Selling Points - Office Lenses 100
Selling Points - RF Coatings 101
Dispensers Aware!! 102
Technical Booklets 103
Technical Publications and Catalogues 104
Page Index
4 The Norville Rx Companion
Where lenses are surfaced to prescription there is usually a range of semi-inished blank diameters available. For single vision resin CR39 this would include 80, 74, 70, 65, 60 and 55mm round diameters, although for bifocals usually only one size is available due to the cost of maintaining all those stock keeping units (SKUs) which over a range of adds from 0.75 to 3.00 would make 10 individual units for each lens type as a minimum, having a range of three or four lens bases making 30 or 40 stock keeping units just for one lens type design.It would not be unlikely for a large prescription house to hold 16,000 stock items.
Where progressives or a D Seg is concerned this is further complicated when held in separate right and lefts, this of course doubles up to 60 or 80 SKUs per lens type. This would even be higher if 4 or 5 diameters needed to be kept across every lens type, however the outcome of the lens surfacing process allows customisation of diameter, reducing from the maximum shown in this bar chart.
Progressive Semi-inished lens blanks most usually come in a diameter of 75mm (see above) which as you can note is of little help when we are to glaze an average frame size (50mm).
One of the most important hallmarks of an excellent pair of spectacles (besides of course the ability to see well!) is the finished substance of its lenses.
Lens shape and decentration combined results in an effective diameter which determines the ultimate minimum size uncut (MSU) needed to glaze a spectacle frame to its speciied optical centration (see page 7).
Nowadays stock inished single vision resin lenses are manufactured as circles and can vary from 75mm down to 55mm rounds. Today we even have a 50mm round stock lens in Trivex material which takes us almost full circle back to the earliest small stock (glass) lenses of the early 20th Century.
Lens Shapes
8.00 75 8.00
MINUS -+ PLUS
75mm
55mm
Round "uncuts"
Actual sizes
Lens Shape
5The Norville Rx Companion
To overcome this most surfaced lenses prior to the surfacing process are reduced in size. Tradiionally this was to a round shape (trepanning) which originally was in 5mm steps, today to the nearest 2mm increments down to 52mm minimum circle. Even then for some lenses especially progressives with oblique cylinders the reduced diameter blanks would waste away to knife edge, something that is not helpful to the subsequent hard coaing or vacuum coaing processes. To minimise this efect we can now oval trepan which results in shapes as these following allows the precise customizaion of substance to small frames and individual prescripions.
Shape ET1 50mm x 35mm Shape ET2 55mm x 40mm
Shape ET3 60mm x 45mm Shape ET4 65mm x 50mm
Shape ET5 70mm x 55mm Shape ET6 75mm x 60mm
Lens Shapes
6 The Norville Rx Companion
All laboratory work instructions are designed around the spectacle frame parameters, eyeshape, DBL, patient’s Rx, optical centre position and if applicable, segment top/fitting cross position. Considering these ensures that lenses are made to the absolute thinnest possible centre and edge substances.
This has obvious benefits for hypermetropes, even those with powers as low as +2.50DS. Myopes gain very little from this process as their lens edge substance is dictated by power and to a lesser degree the final centre thickness specification of the material.
The power of modern computers, together with Norville’s advanced programming has brought huge benefits to the task of lens diameter and thickness computation. This is especially so for progressive lenses where in-built prism differences between the top and bottom of the lens design makes it difficult to manually calculate the finished lens substances (see pages A1 to A3).
Electronic shape transfer technology may obscure the importance of always providing this data, but forabsolute control of substance, it is essential that a shape is provided especially when an E-style or progressive lens thickness is to be calculated. Not to do so is “substance suicide”, so much so that it is better to select a guide shape rather than none. To this end we would use one of the standard design shapes below.
Rectangular Shape5153
Panto shape 49 51
Oval shape464850
Quadra shape515355
Aviator shape525456
Lens DIAMETER controls thickness which is a product of: refractive index worked curves eye shape Rx and decentration type of mount (i.e. rimless etc.)
Given the same diameter, lenses can be produced proportionately thinner by increasing the refractive index of the material. Is it not strange that the current most popular lens material CR39 results in the thickest lenses as it has the lowest refractive index of all n = 1.498.Incorrectly calculating the minimum required diameter can result in considerably thicker lenses than necessary. The old craft adage “measure twice cut once” can be applied to lenses. In this case extra care in assessing lens diameter will result in thinner lenses. If you are unable to use an electronic frame tracer then the diameter can be calculated using the effective diameter chart on the next page.
More About Lens Shapes
7The Norville Rx Companion
STEPS1) Place the frame front down on chart and centralise by use of concentric circles and markings on 180 line so that, in the horizontal direction, an equal number of lines are showing within the eye rim. Repeat for the vertical direction. The frame should now be exactly centralised about its lens centre.
2) Should decentration be required in the finished prescription, then move the centralised frame by the required amount of decentration for that eye, but in the opposite direction to that specified e.g. if 3mm IN is required, move eye 3mm OUT. The distance between the lines is 2mm and either the temporal or nasal inner rim can be used as the reference point. Likewise adjust for vertical decentration if any.
3) Now read around the inner rim of the frame. Note the widest line that is showing, not necessarily the temporal corner, this will indicate the diameter of the blank required to glaze the frame. Make an allowance for the groove depth by simply adding 2mm to the effective diameter from the chart.
Note : Should the frame have a demonstration lens insert, this can be placed immediately over the central cross. Likewise a glazing shape former can be centralised by using the appropriate marks.
Reference Chart A - See appendix A1 Edge Substance - Minus Powers Chart B - See appendix A2 Centre Substance - Plus Powers
180 0
17010
160
20
150
30
140
40
130
50
120
60
110
70
100
80
100
80
110
70
120
60
130
50
140
40
150
30
160
20
17010
17010
160
20
150
30
140
40130
50
120
60
110
70
100
80
17010
160
20
150
30
140
40
130
50
120
60
110
70
100
80
9 0
9 0
180 0
102
9894
9086
8278
7470
6662
5854
5046
4238
10298949086827874706662585450464238
10298
9490
8682
7874
7066
6258
5450
4642
38
102 98
94
90
86
82
78
74
70
66
62
58
54
50
46
42
38
Effective Diameter Chart
MINIMUM SIZE UNCUT (MSU)
8 The Norville Rx Companion
It is important to note that when the effective diameter of your frame is less than the diameters shown, it is usually possible to extend beyond the quoted powers. The central diameter stated is the semi-finished lens blank diameter as supplied by the lens blank manufacturer. To avoid making a great number of stock items these are in the main of a larger diameter than generally needed. As part of our Rx house operation when surfacing lenses to your customized Rx we crib (i.e. reduce) these down to the smallest usable diameter for either a plus or a minus lens i.e. anything from 75mm to 55mm. Where this is possible in the case of a small frame or one with no decentration we can often increase the above stated powers (please enquire).
Whilst in the case of surfaced lenses the power bar is the best indicator, this is not always so for stock lenses, when the traditional lens grid (illustrated) is used. A useful reminder not just how many stocksizes need to be stocked at any one time, but howstock lens diameters reduce with increasing plus power.
In Rx lens production SIZE (diameter) matters for LENS SUBSTANCE.
Reference: Toric Transposition The Worshipful Company of Spectacle Makers learning Booklet OTPL B04. Page 16 Ophthalmic Lenses and Dispensing by Mo Jalie
Maximum combinedplus power
at full diameter.
Maximum combinedminus power
at full diameter.
Maximum blank
diameter in m/m
Higher combined power range at reduced diameter
Perhaps the most important part of the “Simplify Rx” programme is our prescription range indicator bar. The following illustrates how this works:-
Our Simplify Rx programme is based on total power. Forget the complications of the cylinder, just transpose plus powers into minus cylinder form, i.e. highest plus power, and minus powers into plus cylinder form, i.e. highest minus power. Just compare this total power against the prescription range indicator bar. If the power falls within the bar, then we can make it!
NB: Powers are in dioptres, diameters in mm. In the Rx Catalogue pink indicates plus power, grey indicates minus.
Any sphere with any cylinder
falling within total bar power stated
7.50 6.00
60
75
MINUS -+ PLUS
6.00 7.50
60
45
65
Simplify Rx - Lens Power
SV Lens Charts
Lens Power Availability
Power Bar
PLUS
0.00
0.25
0.50
0.75
1.00
1.25
1.50
1.75
2.00
2.25
2.50
2.75
3.00
3.25
3.50
3.75
4.00
4.25
4.50
4.75
5.00
5.25
5.50
5.75
6.00
65
65
6570
0.00 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.00 1.25 1.50 1.75 2.00 2.25 2.50 2.75 3.00
+/+
9The Norville Rx Companion
Originally the only material used for lens making was naturally occurring quartz (pebble lenses) or perhaps
a magnifier from precious jewels for those who might afford it. Slowly the art of batch glass making was
perfected and eventually crown glass n = 1.523 became the world’s common ophthalmic material. W.W.II.
saw experimentation with resin materials. Columbia Resin’s 39th test batch created CR39 from which Orma
1000 became Europe’s first commonly available CR39 lens product.
Norlite lenses, like other CR39 lenses, are manufactured from allyldiglycol carbonate, which is a thermo-
setting polyester hard resin. Lenses are made by the polymerization of monomer and “cast” between two
highly polished glass moulds held by a gasket. This process is applicable both to the lens in finished and
semi-finished forms.
One of the great benefits of resin lens production methods is the economic and multiple output of even
very complex lens surfaces, which if individually produced in say glass material would be cost prohibitive.
A prime example being aspheric and progressive lens forms.
So chemists having perfected the material, lens designers created more sophisticated lens forms. Then back
to the chemists for the application of hard coating to improve the CR39 surface durability, its one Achilles
heel versus glass.
Polymer scientists then spent thousands of hours attempting to perfect a photochromic resin lens, to match
its earlier highly successful glass forerunner. They followed two distinct routes, surface “coated” or integral
monomer mix.
Achieving a high performance resin photochromic has not been an easy task and involves numerous
chemical balancing acts. Although many early attempts with American Optical being one were less than
successful, Transitions Optical eventually succeeded.
Transitions Optical supplies to the lens manufacturers a special monomer for the production of
photochromic resin lenses. The lens manufacturers then mould the lenses as they would for other products
in their ranges but the resulting blanks are then returned to Transitions for a process referred to as
imbibition where photochromic pigments are thermally transferred into the lens matrix from a resin filter,
to a uniform depth of about 100 microns. It is this even layer in the substrata that ensures a uniform
tint in both faded and darkened states. The processed lenses are then returned to the manufacturers
for distribution. It is interesting to view how only the front surface of the lens darkens and not its inner
surface.
That these later materials are available in a higher index comes as no
surprise. Lens manufacturers with the help of chemical companies have
been leap-froging up the index ladder from polycarbonate n = 1.586 to n
= 1.6 resin, then to 1.67 and now n = 1.74, and soon even higher? Why all
this effort? - because higher index delivers thinner lenses.
Orma 1000 is a registered trade name of Essilor.Transitions® is a registered trade name of Transitions Optical.
Reference European Hard Resin Institute www.hardresin.com Norlite Sunsensor Technical Leaflet Corning Sunsensor www.corning.com
Ophthalmic Resins
Thickness reduction resultingfrom reduced curvature.
Percentage
1.498
1.523
1.560
1.586
1.600
1.604
1.660
1.700
1.710
1.800
1.900
1.050
1.000
0.934
0.892
0.872
0.866
0.792
0.747
0.737
0.654
0.581
105.0
100.0
93.4
89.2
87.2
86.6
79.2
74.7
73.7
65.4
58.1
Index Ratio actual % % change
5.0
0.0
-6.6
-10.8
-12.8
-13.4
-20.8
-25.3
-26.3
-34.6
-41.9
10 The Norville Rx Companion
1.670
Resin
High
Index32
Surfaced Lenses -
max 20% LTF
grey, Brown,
Green
Transitions
Polarised
1.36 395nm -24% -17% -26% -17%
1.601
1.586
1.56
1.498
RefractiveIndex nd
MaterialAbbe (V)
ValueSpecificGravity
Approx.UV Cut Off
Tints Edge SubsCentre Subs Weight
60mm Round +10.00DS 60mm Round -10.00DS
Some lenses may not be available in these powers, figures given for comparison
Resin
Mid
Index
Polycarb
Resin
(Airwear)
Corning
Sunsensor
Mid
Index
CR39
Standard
Index
Transitions
Resin
CR39
1.3142 395nm
30 1.2 380nm
38 1.17 380nm
57 1.3 370nm
1.3 350nm
% DifferenceComparedwith 1.498
Resin
% Difference
Compared
with 1.498
Resin
% Difference
Compared
with 1.498
Resin
% Difference
Compared
with 1.498
Resin
-15% -10%
= =
-11% -19% -13% -19%
-14% -20% -16% -20%
= =
-18%
All Norlite
Tints,
Polarised,
Photo-polarising
Additional
Tinting
Not Possible
Max 20% LTF
Photochromic
Polarised,
Pre-tinted
Photo-polarising
Surfaced Lenses -
Max 20% LTF
Polarised,
Transitions,
Sunsensor
Fixed Tints,
Photochromic,
Polarising
Additional
Tinting
Not Possible
-6% -20% -7% -19%1.53
Trivex
Resin
(Trilogy)
43 1.1 400nm
1.74
Resin
Very High
Index
395nm -30% -23% -33% -24%
Transitions
Seiko Tints
Max 20% LTF
Nominally calculated Plano Convex / Plano Concave 60mm diameter, 1.0mm edge and 1.0mm centre thickness
Resin
FR
Vista-Mesh
43 1.16 395nm All Tints
33 1.47
Indices of Ophthalmic Lenses - Resin Materials
MR8
MR7
-10%
58
1.497
Min CTmm
2.0
2.0
1.4
1.5
1.5
1.4
1.5
1.3
1.4
1.451 Perspex 355nm58
11The Norville Rx Companion
The closer the study of ophthalmic lens material the more there is the realization that polycarbonate is a really clever material, a product of continuing ingenuity with materials chemistry. Considered to be the most impact resistant of any lens material. You can drive a nail right through a polycarbonate lens (Fig A) and it doesn’t break. Although glass is a far more rigid material, please do not attempt a nail test!
Invented by General Electric USA for Plexiglass protective shields, Gentex later made ophthalmic lenses.
Polycarbonate is a thermoplastic often referred to as a “plastic metal” due to its strength-to-weight ratio which is equal to that of aluminium and is twice that of zinc.
Lenses are made through the injection of granules into stainless steel moulds where under great pressure they form a transparent lens. A further hard coating treatment ensures this inherently soft material will now equal a CR39 lens for surface durability.
Whilst earlier production of polycarbonate lenses did have limitations in matching the optical qualities of other established materials, today’s are much improved. The first production of polycarbonate lenses was at 3.0mm centre substance (minus powers) designed for industrial safety use. It is the only lens capable of satisfying BS EN 166 Grade F, the ultimate “would stop a bullet” lens (Fig B). Improvements to production techniques saw 2.0mm production series and today 1.5mm centre substance for minus powers. Polycarbonate has completed the transition from an industrial lens product into the field of general ophthalmic lenses, with its index at a high n=1.586 and being so light and strong, some consider it can be regarded as a replacement to CR39. We can tint polycarbonate up to 50% LTF in any colour, beyond 50% (up to 20% LTF) in grey SV only. Polycarbonate can be RF-AR coated. It does require modified edging techniques, whose exposed edges can look rather mangly unless edge polished.
Available in TRANSITIONS® photochromic forms, especially suitable with its higher UV absorption (380nm). A particularly exciting development is NuPolar polarized, making the safest glare free outdoor lens in the world.
But life is ever a balance of strengths and weaknesses. Polycarbonate is very strong, lightweight and thin but it has one disadvantage and that is it dislikes intensely, to the extent of succumbing, attacks from liquids in the hydrocarbons and ketones family. These include petrol, benzene, toluene, xylene and particularly acetone. Many of which won’t be found in an optical practice, but acetone might well be (as a constituent of nail varnish remover!). Although technically the lenses, when hardcoated, will resist this, if they are swamped with the chemical and it runs across the surface and enters the material via the exposed v-edge or any drill holes if a rimless i.e. those areas not hardcoated, the lens will be damaged. However, it is mainly those persons working in an industrial plant that are likely to be affected by these chemicals. The majority of your dresswear patients should be unaffected.
Fig. B“Bullseye Lens”
Impact made by an 8mm steel ball travelling at over 90mph.
Fig. A
Polycarbonate - The Strongest Ophthalmic Lens Material
12 The Norville Rx Companion
At its time polycarbonate was almost the perfect lens material, yet we are now emphasising the benefits
of Trivex lens material. The more perfect than perfect lens material! Compared to CR39 it has exceptional
impact resistance properties whilst having the lowest specific gravity of any lens (1.1), and also bettering
polycarbonate with a 45 V value. It exceeds polycarbonate in its resistance to chemicals and perhaps for
this reason alone it is the best lens for glazing rimless frames.
Trivex lenses are the first ultra-lightweight optical material to combine the best attributes of
thermoplastics (polycarbonate) and thermosets (CR39). The result is a product that provides high impact
resistance while retaining superior optical performance. This is a highly complex manufacturing process
resulting in the unlikely outcome that true Trivex will ever be a cheap lens material.
Thermoplastics: molecular chains
are independent of each other,
allowing free “flow” and the ability
for the material to be reformed
- greater attributes for impact
resistance.
Thermosets: “Cross links” created
during polymerization produce a
complex, interconnected and
permanent network - perfect
for retaining superior optics and
processability because it is highly
stable.
Trivex
Clear Vision
Especially for reading, computer work and driving vision
acuity is important, Trivex lens material provides the
optical quality that optimizes corrective prescriptions
and help to reduce eye strain.
Abbe Value: The higher the Abbe Value, the more accurately a lens aligns the spectrum of light waves that
pass through it. Lens materials with lower Abbe Values are unable to focus these light waves accurately,
resulting in vision defects that appear as distracting fringes of colour around dark type and objects—what is
known as “chromatic aberration”.
Lightweight Comfort
Lenses made with Trivex are ultra-light for ultimate
comfort; Trivex is one of the lightest lens materials on
the planet. Unlike other lens materials, Trivex blends the
beneits of light weight and thinness, often resembling
a high index lens, but weighing even less than
polycarbonate.
Speciic Gravity: The lower the number, the lighter and more comfortable the lens will be. This number
represents the relative density of an object to an equal volume of water. Anything with a speciic gravity of
less than 1.0 will loat on water. Although a high-index lens appears to be thin and light, it actually has a
higher speciic gravity because it is made from a more dense material. On the other hand, a lens made from
Trivex material is so light that it almost loats.
High & Ultra-
High IndexPolycarbonate
32-4129-3258
Std. Plastic
(CR-39™)
43-45Optical Quality
Abbe Value
Trivex
High & Ultra-
High IndexPolycarbonate
1.30-1.47g/cm3
Std. Plastic
(CR-39™)
Lightweight
Speciic Gravity
Trivex
1.32g/cm3 1.22g/cm3
1.8-2.0mm 1.2-1.5mm 1.5mm
1.11g/cm3
1.2-1.5mm
Thinness
Typical Centre
Thickness
PPG TRIVEX is also known as TRILOGY (Youngers Opt) & PNX (Hoya)
13The Norville Rx Companion
Never before has
a lens material
been designed and
optimised specifically
for rimless frames
Stress which can be a factor in star fracturing around screw holes is nonexistent in Trivex lenses, which can
only be a positive attribute when glazing into rimless mounts. Added to its resistance to chemical attack
and Trivex is likely to become the lens of choice for industrial safety, particularly within the petro-chemical
industries.
Stress in other materials Stress in Trivex lenses
www.ppgtrivex.com
Trivex
Strength and Protection
For the demands of everyday living, eyeglass lenses
need to provide protection from unexpected impact,
breakage and from the sun’s harmful UV radiation.
The high tensile strength and durability of Trivex - plus
its stress free characteristics - make it an excellent choice for drill-mount frames and any lightweight
fashion frames that rely on lenses for structural rigidity. Trivex blocks 100% of harmful UV rays.
ANSI Z87.1 High-Velocity Test: The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) has established the most
stringent impact and projectile penetration standards for optical lenses. The standard speciies that
high-impact lenses must pass “high-velocity” testing where 1/4 inch steel pellets are “shot” at the lens
at a velocity of 150 feet-per-second. Lenses made from Trivex material pass the ANSI Z87.1 High-velocity
Impact Test and the FDA Drop Ball Test.
High & Ultra-
High IndexPolycarbonate
FAIL
Std. Plastic
(CR-39™)
PASS
Strength/
Durability
ANSI Z-87.1
High-Velocity
Impact Test
Trivex
FAIL FAIL
14 The Norville Rx Companion
Important : All photochromic materials are temperature dependent.All transmission values and indices based on manufacturers technical information and are stated as a guide only.
* Ascertained at 22 degrees C.# With XARE coatings transmission values are increased by 6%
Ormex is a registered trademark of Essilor
Transitions® is a registered trademark of Transitions Optical Inc.
SunSensors™ is a registered trademark of Corning Incorporated, Corning, New York
Drivewear® is a registered trademark of Younger Optics
Resin Photochromic Lenses
50%LUMINOUS TRANSMISSION FACTOR
0%DARK
100%LIGHT
Transitions VI - Grey * 1.50
Transitions VI - Brown * 1.50
Transitions XTRActive - Grey 1.50
Drivewear 1.50
Transitions VI - Grey * 1.53
Transitions VI - Brown * 1.53
Transitions XTRActive - Grey 1.53
Transitions Trivex - Gold 1.53
SunSensors - Grey *# 1.56
SunSensors - Brown *# 1.56
Polycarb Transitions VI - Grey * 1.59
Polycarb Transitions VI - Brown * 1.59
Polycarb Transitions XTRActive - Grey * 1.59
Transitions VI - Grey 1.60
Transitions VI - Brown 1.60
Transitions XTRActive - Grey 1.60
Transitions VI - Grey 1.67
Transitions VI - Brown 1.67
Transitions XTRActive - Grey 1.67
Transitions VI - Grey 1.74
n=Type Resin Photochromic Transmission Values
12
1289
89
89 15
1083
85
85
20
20
85 25
1235
1289
1589
83 10
89 15
1083
14
1787
87
12
12
81
81
87
87
87
17
14
14
Others - Bespoke Order BO89% - 12% LTF
Light (23°C) Dark
83% - 10% LTFLight (23°C) Dark
Behind windscreen - 50%
Autumn 2012 Availability Check List
Page numbers ref Oct 2012 Ophthalmic Lens Catalogue.
CR39
CR39
INDEX
1.53
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.53
1.59
1.60
1.67
1.67
1.74
TRIVEX
TRIVEX
POLYCARBONATE
SV
Stock
SV
Aspheric
SV
NORTOR
RD28
IRSFT28 FT35
Trifocal
728
PPL
Sportor
SV
Surfaced
Trifocal
835
SV
SportorC28
POLYCARBONATE
1.60
PPL
Image
PPL
Ultor
1.53
Page 9
PPL
Sentor
PPL
Vector
Page 9
RangePPL
Freeway
1.59
1.59
Page 12 Page 12 Page 20
VersatileBooster
Reading
Bureau
Occupational
Page 14
Page 12
Page 12
Page16
Page 17 Page 18 Page 18 Page 20Page 19 Page 21 Page 24 Page 25 Page 25 Page 25
Page 12 Page 14 Page 16 Page 18 Page 20 Page 21 Page 24 Page 25 Page 25Page 25
Page 12 Page 16 Page 27 Page 27 Page 27
Page 33 Page 33 Page 34
Page 33 Page 33 Page 33 Page 34 Page 36Page 35 Page 38 Page 40
Page 33 Page 33 Page 35 Page 36Page 36 Page 37
Page 36 Page 37
Page 38 Page 38 Page 40
Page 38
Page 46
Page 47
Page 46
Page 46 Page 46
Page 47
Page 57
Page 69
Page 49 Page 51
Page 51 Page 51 Page 51
Page 52
Page 51
Page 51
Page 53
Page 55 Page 57 Page 57
Page 69Page 69Page 69
Page 79
Page 57
Page 69
Page 79
Page 58
Page 58
Page 70
Page 59
Page 59
Page 71
Page 71
Page 79
Page 57
Page 69
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Page 71
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Page 74Page 74
Page 37
Page 63
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Page 74 Page 74 Page 74 Page 74
Page 80 Page 81
Page 59
Page 46
Page 47
Page 49
Page 53
Page 71
Page 49
16 The Norville Rx Companion
Another clever optical idea whose effectivity is rather overlooked. Perhaps instead of being termed POLARISING LENSES (restricting vibrations of light waves to one direction) they were termed “Glare Beaters”, consumers would more readily understand their unique advantages. In today’s hard world environment the visual confusion of reflected light from concrete, buildings and roads, cars and other mechanical clutter, polarising lenses with their unique ability to sort out disorderly reflective light is the answer to eliminate glare. Polarised film is created by having iodine crystals randomly imbedded into a translucent film base. The embedded film is stretched in one direction which causes the crystals to become aligned in parallel rows. The classic polarising test is to look at the surface of water, try it with and without a polarising filter, you will be convinced!
Now a polarising filter is not a new innovation, Polaroid afocal sunspecs have been around in quantities since 1935. That past has seen both glass and resin polarised Rx with earlier resin that unfortunately enjoyed the habit of de-laminating itself when overheated. What is new is todays technology of casting the polarising filter in and around its CR39 (or polycarbonate) host material, so that it will not fall apart. With the polarising element held parallel in the front 1mm of the semi-finished blank, this means that today’s surfacing can be as thin as 1.8mm centre thickness for minus.
One of the questions often asked is “can I have a clear polarising lens”? (No!) Owing to the parallel row alignment of the iodine crystals, if they were clear they would not block light in a specific direction. You can see from the chart that NuPolar is available in a lighter transmission around 35% but the efficiency begins to fall off albeit only slightly.
Untinted Nupolar Luminous % Absorption % Polarization % Gray 1 35% 65% 99.7% Gray 3 15% 85% 99.9% Brown 3 19% 81% 99.9% Green 3 15% 85% 99.9%
NuPolar can be AR coated, it will NOT delaminate due to its “cast in” design. Should you want to vary the colour then it is possible to over-tint NuPolar with either a mono or graduated tint. There is one important critical factor in that the axis of the polarising filter must be accurately determined for surfacing and glazing processes. The BSI standard tolerance for this is 5 degrees. An even worse error, only possible on SV Rx lenses, is to set one or both the polarising axes 90 degrees from their correct alignment. To confirm we haven’t induced this error, Norville glazed polarised finished Rxs are checked on a polarising axis verification unit. This error is more common than you would think, until one remembers a spherical polarised Rx lens always needs a horizontal reference line!
Rx polarizing NuPolar in SV, bifocal or progressive is undoubtedly one of the better sun lens available anywhere, eliminating glare and enhancing contrast. Today with the switch from toughened to laminated car windscreens NuPolar an excellent drivers’ lens.
Reference NuPolar™(Younger Optical) www.youngeroptics.com The Art and Science of Polarization Publication ‘04 Youngers Optics via Norville
Rx polarising availability - CR39 and higher index resins
NuPolar Polarising Lenses
CR39
INDEX
1.53
1.50
1.60
1.59
TRIVEX
POLYCARBONATE
SVSV
NORTOR
SPORTOR
UltorSPORTOR
ISPFT28 FT35
Image
PPL
Trifocal 728
Availability Check List
RangeFreeway
ISP
Page 12/13 Page 13
Page 33
Page 57
Page 16 Page 17 Page 18 Page 28 Page 28 Page 28
Page 33
Page 47
Page 57
Page 48 Page 52 Page 53
Grey 15%
Grey 35%
Brown
Green
Copper
Page numbers ref October 2012 Prescription Catalogue
Page 64 Page 64
Page 39/40 Page 39
Page 47 Page 53
17The Norville Rx Companion
Drivewear Lenses
Younger Optics, under the ownership of the Ripps family, are the largest independent lens casters remaining in the Western World. Younger’s were the very i rst to meld all the combinations of polarisation and photochromics together in one lens, which they called Drivewear. Drivewear has the specii c advantage of being the i rst photochromic that darkened behind a vehicle windscreen.
In creating Drivewear the following technological breakthroughs were achieved by Youngers:
Drivewear’s variable tint technology is provided by using advancements in Transitions® Optical Photochromic Technology,
while Drivewear’s polarisation properties are provided by breakthroughs in NuPolar® technology by Younger Optics.
Many attempts have been made to combine polarisation and photochromics. These attempts did not work because the
properties of the lens were not designed specii cally to make the two technologies work together in a complimentary and synergistic way. The resulting product did not utilise either technology to its fullest potential or achieve any direct visual improvements.
Drivewear lenses go beyond these unsuccessful attempts by using each of these specii c technologies in ways that enhances each one’s capabilities. Drivewear represents the highest utilisation of technology of any lens ever introduced
into our industry.
Drivewear’s combination of technologies is so advanced and novel that multiple patents have been i led on this invention (for instance, “Eyewear having selective spectral response”, US patent #6926405 and WO 2005/001554).
www.drivewearlens.com
Development of light, high contrast polariser, which maintains high polarisation efi ciency.
Casting polarisation into Transitions monomer and achieving strong chemical bond.
Making the polarised and dye package work together to deliver the proper spectral colour results at the varying states of the lens.
Development of of the dye package which includes photochromics initiated by visible and UV light.
Developing a polariser which withstands the higher temperature of the Transitions and multi-coating processes.
Complying with trafi c colour recognition according to ISO standards at every state of the lens.
See Page 15 for Drivewear availability
18 The Norville Rx Companion
Polarised Transmission Charts
Drivewear Lenses
4 0 0 5 0 0 6 0 0 7 0 0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
4 0 0 5 0 0 6 0 0 7 0 0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
4 0 0 5 0 0 6 0 0 7 0 0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
During the overcast weather, the lens only active element is the high contrast green/yellow polarised fi lm. The polariser blocks blinding glare and high contrast colour enhances the object recognition and depth perception for the driver. The lens light absorption in this state is 68%.
While the windshield blocks UV light and prevents the standard photochromic molecules from activation, the new, visible spectrum photochromic molecules are activated by intense visible portion of the sunlight spectrum.
Due to this, the lens colour changes to the Copper/Brown and the lens light absorption increases to 78%. The lens continues to block blinding glare and insures great visual comfort for the driver.
As the UV rays are no longer blocked by the car windshield, the layer of Transitions photochromic molecules become active. As all 3 technology layers of the lens are active, the colour changes to the Dark Brown and the light absorption increases further again to 88% while 100% UV rays are blocked.
LOW LIGHT CONDITIONS
HIGH CONTRAST GREEN / YELLOW COLOUR
DRIVING CONDITIONS
COPPER COLOUR
OUTSIDE CONDITIONS
DARK REDDISH BROWN COLOUR
OVERCAST DAYLIGHT BRIGHT LIGHT
DRIVEWEAR TRANSMISSION DURING DRIVINGDRIVEWEAR TRANSMISSION IN LOW LIGHT CONDITIONS DRIVEWEAR TRANSMISSION DURING BRIGHTLIGHT CONDITIONS
Reference * Note excellent UV Absorption
NuPolar Grey & INAR
19The Norville Rx Companion
There is increasing scientific and governmental concern at the enlarging size of the Northern pole’s ozone hole and the thinning of the ozone layer over Northern Europe. The absence of this protective layer, absorber of the Sun’s UV light now exposes us all to greater risks. The visual being that the crystalline lens may become prematurely aged by excessive exposure.Within the vast scope of electromagnetic spectrum that stretches from radio wave frequencies at one end to Gamma radiation at the other, there is a very limited range (380 - 770nm) of wavelengths that we humans perceive as “light”. Each side of this visible spectrum there is invisible radiation, which our eyes are not designed to detect: ultra-violet and infra-red.Infra-red radiation to the eyes should be avoided. However, there is a sensation of “heat” which our natural instincts tell us to “pull back” from, unlike ultra-violet, perceived by many as the most dangerous range as its presence may not be felt or seen so readily.The UV spectrum extends from around 400nm down to approximately 1nm where it overlaps with X radiation.
UV can be sub-divided:UVC - Wavelengths below 280nm are effectively filtered out by the ozone layer surrounding the earth. The amount of absorption varies and is less near to the equator and at high altitudes due to the reduced atmospheric thickness.UVB - Wavelengths between 280nm and 315nm; responsible for sunburn and snow blindness. The amount of ultra-violet affecting a person is substantially increased by reflection from surfaces such as snow, sand and water.UVA - Possibly the most dangerous area, between 315nm and 380nm, causing chronic eye damage to the eye, especially low dose exposure over a long period of time.Some Norville lens products are naturally UV absorbing*, such as photochromics (glass and resin), our solid Greyray tint, clear Polycarbonate and other high index products.Untreated CR39 lenses give protection only up to 350nm. However by requesting “Norlite UV400” they can be dye treated to increase UV protection up to 400nm, giving your patients and yourself peace of mind that their eyes are being protected from potentially harmful UV. Each treated lens is individually checked on a special light meter to ensure the integrity of the UV process.Below are two charts demonstrating the difference between an un-treated CR39 and a Norlite UV400 treated lens.
Who will gain most benefits from Norlite UV?• Aphakics who through surgery lose nature’s own intraocular filter. Norlite UV treated lenses are essential to offset this loss in post operative cataract patients.• Those that take photosensitising medication, such as certain tranquillisers, diabetics, anti-diabetic and hypersensitive medication, oral contraceptives, antibiotics and Psoralen as used in psoriasis treatment.• Those that spend either a lot of time in the sun or are subjected to bright light.• All young eyes.
Reference * UV Absorption see pages 20 and 26 - 31
Untreated CR39 Norlite UV CR39
UV Protective Lenses
20 The Norville Rx Companion
Why blue light can be harmful to you
At 380nm, the energy per photon is 3.27eVAt 760nm, the energy per photon is 1.63eV
Blue light has almost twice the energy per photonas red light at the other end of the visible spectrum.
This is the same energy that causes sunburn and cataracts.
(Energy per photon) = (Planck’s Constant) x (Speed of light)
(Wavelength)
350nm 450nm400nm 500nm 550nm 600nm 650nm 700nm 750nm
ULTRAVIOLET NEAR IR MID IR FAR IRVISIBLEX-RAYS
1nm 3µm 30µm
© B
PI
© B
PI
450nm
400nm
500nm
550nm
600nm
650nm
700nm
750nm
PLS 600 blocks all light below this point
PLS MEL blocks all light below this point
PLS 550 blocks all light below this point
PLS 540 blocks all light below this point
PLS 500 blocks all light below this point
PLS 400 blocks all light below this point
PLS 480 blocks all light below this point
Protective Lens Series
Norlite PLS Tints
See Pages 26 to 28 for more information
21The Norville Rx Companion
Reference Further reading: “Tinted Lenses” section 7 Ophthalmic Lenses and Dispensing by Mo Jalie Abi Grute Dispensing Optics April ‘04
Tinted Resin Lenses
Just because a lens is tinted it doesn’t follow that it will be a good UV absorber. In fact it could be visually more dangerous wearing a very dark lens than one completely clear. This is explained by the fact that a very dark low transmittance lens, say 15% LTF, causes the wearers pupils to enlarge with the potential to allow even more UV light into the eye! All tinted lens suppliers should be able to supply a Transmission chart showing that particular tints individual absorption characteristics. Many of todays cleverer lens meters will print out a L.T.F. verification slip. Assessment of the charts will show the UV cut off point and how other parts of the visual spectrum are altered. Lens transmission charts can often seem rather bland, so for a really interesting plot see page 39, Didymium specialist filter.
You will perhaps believe that resin tinting is simple and straightforward, unfortunately this is not so.A simplistic view is that all it involves is dunking lenses in hot dyes. Quite the opposite, two lens simultaneously put in the same dye for the same duration will not emerge identical colours! Lenses of different ‘ages’, different thicknesses or from different manufacturers all take up the tint dye at varying rates. These complications apply before you even consider hard coated lenses and other index lenses. Some lenses tint in 3 minutes for light colours, but very dark hues may take up to 3 hours. One half of every pair will need its colour finely “tuned” to exactly match its twin.
This is where the skill comes in when deciding which colour “dip” is needed to perfect the match, or if just a quick visit to the neutralizer pot is enough. This is reasonably manageable with CR39 resin, but hardcoated and other materials bring new concerns. Polycarbonate, for instance is tintable, but only its micron thin outer hard coat, there is a limit to how dark a tint this layer can absorb. This is why many high index materials can only be tinted to 60% LTF. To achieve darker in polycarbonate we need to start with a pre-tinted base material, then add extra tint to its own hard coat layer.
Always remember colour is a very subjective process for different eyes and brains. Some will often say “that brown has too much red” which another person cannot perceive. Another area of potential strife is when an RF coating is applied over a tinted lens. It can change the transmission characteristics by 8% as well as the perception of colour, particularly so on lighter hue’s say B80. The best way around this is also to have some RF coated colour samples amongst your other demonstration lenses. Finally the greatest challenge is that samples of say five or more years old, especially if exposed to sunlight, will bleach out. If you are looking for a critical colour match either send your sample or keep your samples fresh!
Regulations.Under recent CEN regulations it is necessary to classify tint densities by a filter category number based on the transmission characteristics of the lens as defined by BS EN 1836 : 1997. There are five categories under the “Sunglare Filters” classification,
Transmittance Description Usage Restrictions Filter Category Range LTF %
100 - 81 Clear or very light tint Comfort, indoors, cosmetic None 0 80 - 44 Light tint Low sunlight Not suitable for night driving 1 43 - 19 Medium tint Medium sunlight Not suitable for night driving 2 18 - 9 Dark tint Bright sunlight Not suitable for night driving, 3 may not be suitable for any driving
8 - 3 Very dark tint Very bright sunlight Not suitable for any driving 4
The end wearer should be informed as to which category their tinted lenses come under and the usage/restrictions that may apply.
Drivers should not at any time be using lenses where the transmission is less than 8% (i.e. very dark), or the lens colour has an unacceptable traffic signal recognition. For night driving a minimum of 75% LTF is required.See Pages 39 and 40 for Glass tints.
22 The Norville Rx Companion
Like any new species, those higher indices tend to be fragile “plants”. Many can only prosper due to the fact that they are wrapped in sophisticated and advanced coatings. But with that comes some remarkable benefits - extra thin substance 1.0mm at the centre, only possible due to the complex stiffening chemistry of their “outer coats”, resulting in a final lens more durable than standard CR39. Complex aspheric and multi-aspheric designs in high index are a supreme achievement of the lens maker’s art.
Many of these lenses achieve excellent “natural” UV absorption without further treatment at the Rx house. Standard glass sits at just 300nm cut off, but many mid and high index resins come in at a full 380nm, even 400nm.
One of the challenges is to remember which can and cannot be subsequently tinted, perhaps it’s helpful to summarise with the following chart. Depending upon the chemical make-up of the lens and the semi-finished manufacturer’s application or type of hardcoating, the ability of the lens to be tinted will vary. Below we have listed guidelines as to tint / density availability. These are general guidelines and are subject to change as material specifications advance.
Mid and High Index Resin Tintability
Full Tint Graduated TintLens Material/Type
Standard Resin 1.498
All Photochromic, including Sunsensors,in all indices
Trilogy 1.53
Norlite 1.60
Norlite 1.67
Norlite 1.74
Yes
No No
YesYes
Yes
Yes
YesSurfaced Lenses
FR 1.56Stock Lenses
Yes
No
Up to 20%
Up to 20%Grey, Brown, Green
Surfaced Lenses
Polycarbonate 1.59Stock Lenses
No
No
Up to 20%Grey, Brown, Green
Up to 20%Grey, Brown, Green
Up to 20%Grey, Brown, Green
Up to 20%Grey, Brown, Green
Up to 20%Grey, Brown, Green
No
Transmission %
23The Norville Rx Companion
The following pages exhibit the transmission graphs for Norlite tints, remember all data stated is LTF.
NorliteVerona
NorliteTan
NorliteAqua
Norlite Tint Transmission Charts
NorliteEarth
NorliteNeutral
V40
V20
V80
V60
T40
T20
T80
T60
A40
A20
A80
A60
E40
E20
E80
E60
N40
N20
N80
N60
24 The Norville Rx Companion
Norlite Tint Transmission Charts contd.
Reference For companion tints available in resin or glass see page 41.
NorliteHazel
NorliteDove
NorlitePacific
NorliteMagenta
NorliteKosmos
H40
H20
H80
H60
D40
D20
D80
D60
P40
P20
P80
P60
M40
M20
M80
M60
K40
K20
K80
K60
25The Norville Rx Companion
Norlite Tint Transmission Charts contd.
NORLITE TINT RANGE CLASSIFICATION (according to EN 1836 : 1997)
TINT CODES TRANSMISSION % FILTER CATEGORY & COMMENTS
STANDARD RANGE
A80, D80, E80, H80, P80, T80, V80, K80, L80 80 0 Very light tint
A60, D60, E60, H60, P60, T60, V60 K60, L60 60 1 Light tint - not suitable for night driving
A40, D40, E40, H40, P40, T40, V40 K40 L40 40 2 Medium tint - not suitable for night driving
A20, D20, E20, H20, P20, T20, V20 K20, L20 20 2 Medium tint - not suitable for night driving
NorliteLilac
L40
L20
L80
L60
Norlite Trivex NXT Transmission Charts
TNXT D.E. Yellow Contrast 84% LTF TNXT Berkeley Yellow Contrast 62% LTF
TAXT Atmos Altitude Grey 15% LTF TAXT Atmos Altitude Brown 15% LTF
26 The Norville Rx Companion
VISTA MESH - Brown 82%
A unique optical grating combined with a cosmetic tint and RF coating, Vista-Mesh has the ability to deflect electromagneticradiations, bringing visual calm to many sufferers of:
* visual stress* flicker* migraines* night driving
Available in single vision and progressive (white & Photochromic)
Protective Lens Series - PLS
Some general recommendations follow for the selection of UV lenses by occupation and ocular disorders :
PLS450
Speciality Tinted Resins
PLS (UV) 400 - Nearly clear 92%
Clear lens absorbing up to 400nm. Passed traffic light recognition test.Select for patients who :* spend a lot of time in the sun e.g. construction workers* live in sunny climates* do a lot of driving e.g. representatives, truck drivers* take photosensitising medication e.g. certain tranquilisers, diuretics, anti-diabetic & hypertensive medications, oral contraceptives, antibiotics and even artificial sweeteners, laxatives and psoralen as used in psoriasis treatment.* have had cataract surgery* have pterygiums or pingueculae
PLS (UV) 450 - Yellow 86%
Yellow lens absorbing up to 450nm.
Passed traffic light recognition test.Select for patients who :* do a lot of reading or watching television* work under fluorescent lighting in offices and supermarkets.
For sporting applications see the Trail lens on page 29.
PLS400
PLS Bristol Blue - 14%
A very intense deep blue tint which research has suggested is of help to patient’s with photosensitive epilepsy.
PLSBlue
27The Norville Rx Companion
PLS (UV) 480 - Brown 15%
Brown lens absorbing up to 480nm.
Select for patients with :* macular issues* retinitis pigmentosa * post operative* forensic science
PLS 500 - Orange 50%
Orange lens absorbing up to 500nm.
Select for patients with :* developing cataracts* diabetic retinopathy * corneal dystrophy* albinism * aphakia and pseudophakia * photophobia* optic atrophy* sporting needs such as fishing, sailing, water sports, tennis, cycling, golf, hiking, skiing, mountain climbing and flying.* The Retinitis Pigmentosa Society recommend a UV527 which is a similar colour to the UV500.
PLS (UV) 540 - Brown 12%
Yellow brown lens absorbing up to 540nm
Select for patients who are :* contact lens wearers* senior citizens
* skiers, boatmen, pilots and mountaineers
PLS (UV) 550 - Red 10%
Intense red lens absorbing up to 550nm
Select for patients who have :* macular degeneration* colour blindness* retinitis pigmentosa
Also for:* night vision adaption* dark room filters* 3-D glasses
Speciality Tinted Resins
PLS480
PLS500
PLS540
PLS550
PLS Series contd.
28 The Norville Rx Companion
Speciality Tinted Resins contd.
PLS (UV) 600 - Red 3%
Red lens absorbing up to 600 nm
Select for patients with :* macular degeneration* anridia* retinitis pigmentosa* glaucoma* extreme photophobia* exposure to intense ultraviolet light such as dentists and dental nurses using ultraviolet cured dental fillings and nurses working under bilirubin lights* exposure to welding flash (wear under helmet)* red/green colour blindness (UV600 filter may aid this condition which is more common in males)* sports and recreational needs such as dark room filters,
3-D lenses and red light target definition.
NB for 3-D green specifications see next page.
PLS 410 - Rose 50%
Rose lens absorbing up to 600 nm
Select for :
* fluorescent lighting
* light flicker
* eye strain* tension headache
* photophobia - blepharospasm
PLS Melanin - Brown 30%
Brown lens absorbing up to 600 nm
* natural body pigment protects against sunlight damage
* maintains natural coloursUses :
* post cataract
* AMD protection
PLS are available on any standard CR39 lens material. Sample lorgnettes are available and can be ordered from our Telesales Department.
UNDERWATER PINK - 50%This USA product is designed to filter out blue wavelengthsin the water enabling users to better experience underwatercolours that are often lost at depth.
UNDERWATER YELLOW - 86%See PLS 450 details on page 26.Use for low light situations, (lakes, quarries, caves) and those diving in the North Atlantic will benefit from this tint which optimises available light and helps improve visibility.
PLS600
PLS Series contd.
PLSMEL
PLS410
CR39
FR
UWP
29The Norville Rx Companion
Speciality Tinted Resins contd.
TRAIL - 96%
A yellow colour.
Yellow assists in enhancing definition and this tint
is therefore of use to those who participate in
shooting sports and tracking golf balls.
SKY - 28%
A reddish-orange colour with a tan flare.
Developed for the expert who wants to increase his or
her skill when shooting at a clay pigeon or tracking a target.
Increased background lighting brings the target
visually closer for sharper distance estimations.
FIELD - 19%
A brown colour with a tan flare.
It is designed for heightened contrast ability and
is highly recommended for restful glasses.
Particularly useful for general spectator activities.
WOODS - 42%
A forest green colour.
It enhances critical outdoor shades, particularly benefiting golfers
making it easier for them to see the fairway contours and read the
slopes and curves of the greens.
RA 15 - 18%
A dark greenish grey colour.
The Norlite colour equivalent to the Rayban G15 lens.
MARINE 3D.
A green/blue colour.
RED 3D.
see PLS600 details on previous page.
Field
Trail
Woods
Sky
RA15
3D
30 The Norville Rx Companion
ACTION - 54%.Perception sports tint,highlighting colour contrasts.
TENNIS - 62%.A neutral grey tint.
S40 - 40%.A yellow blue blocker.
Serengeti Colour Equivalent.A colour tint equivalent to the fullyexposed colour of the Serengeti Drivers.
London Transport Neutral LTN 15%.A neutral grey tint.
Speciality Tinted Resins contd.
SERE
Action
Tennis
S40
31The Norville Rx Companion
Dot Com Alpha - DTA 96%A blue/grey colour.With XARE coating.
Dot Com Beta - DTB 90%A golden syrup colouring.
With XARE coating.
Dot Com Office Tints.
A range of comfort “office tints” to help to relax your eyes particularly under fluorescent lighting, when using visual display units.
Dot Com Eva - DTE 85%A hazel brown.
With XARE coating.
Dot Com Gamma - DTG 96%A blue/green colour.With XARE coating.
Speciality Tinted Resins contd.
Dot Com F - DTF 94%A rose colour.
With MAR coating.
32 The Norville Rx Companion
Mirror and Flash Coatings
Mirror and Flash coatings in all their peacock reflections,can be applied to CR39, Trilogy, Polycarbonate, FR and n=1.60 substrates.
Important User Note: By nature of its effect mirror surfaces will emphasise any slight surface scratching, especially when viewed through the lens.This, and the importance of handling, should be indicated to clients at hand over time. Norville will only warranty the lens against premature (12 months) surface degradation and not everyday handling abuse.
Prescriber Notes: Transmission % figures are for a lens with the above quoted mono tint base,you may specify any of the tint transmission % variations in the brown or grey tint ranges.
NB. Variation of the base tint makes little difference to the mirror reflection colour, only the transparent colour when viewed.
Flash Mirror NO OFLAYERS
CODE FLASH LTF%BASE
TINT LTF
GF Gunpowder 45 G80 3
10B8030AF Atomic
Visible Transmission
UV400 Gunpowder Code: GF
Visible Transmission
Flash Code: FF
Norville Silver Mirror Code: MS
Visible Transmission
Norville Gold Mirror Code: MG
Visible Transmission
Norville Metro Blue Mirror Code: MP
Visible Transmission
Norville Copper Mirror Code: MC
Visible Transmission
Prescriber Notes: Graduated mirroring not possible. MirrorRx only available to Norville lenses.
User Note: All meet BS.EN.1836 colour signal recognition.
However, MC and MS are not suitable for driving and road use (transmission under 8%).
NO OFLAYERS
3
10
10
Full Mirror
CODE MIRROR LTF%BASE
TINT LTF
MS SILVER 9 G33
B2510MG GOLD
B2512MC COPPER
RA159MP METRO BLUE
3
33The Norville Rx Companion
Reflection Free Coatings
A 1.50 index lens reflects approximately 8% of light, or put another way, only transmits 92% to the user’s eye. With higher index materials this reflectance can increase up to 16%.
Reflections are disconcerting not only for the spectacle wearer, but for the observer as well. Reflections are unflattering and especially troublesome for spectacle wearers when driving a car at night or in dimly lit conditions when reflections from car headlights and windscreen add to the discomfort of the wearer.
Reflections can be reduced to less than 1% by the application of reflection free coatings.
References Chapter 5 Ophthalmic Lenses and Dispensing by Mo Jalie Norville Clarity Booklet
When we are looking through an uncoated lenswith a refractive index of n=1.5, we will observe aparticular effect. Besides the objects we are interested in seeing through the spectacle lenses, our vision will be disturbed by relected “images” from the lens surfaces.Using the Fresnel equation, we can calculate values:
r = (n0 - n-1)2 / (n0 + n1)2,
n0 = refractive index of air
n1 = refractive index of lens material
This disturbing relected light comes from the backside and from internal relections. Roughly speaking.in the case of CR39 (where n1 =1.5), 92.2% of usableinformation (transmitted light) will be disturbed byrelected light of about 7.8%.
The ratio - “disturbing light/usable light” of 7.8/92.2= 8.5% is drastically decreased to 1/99 = 1 % by an AR coating, as we can easily see in the graphic.
This means: The real beneit of an AR coating isa strong decrease of this “disturbance” ratio.
This becomes even more important if we imagine these ratios on absorbing sunglass lenses.
In the case of an uncoated sunglass lens with arefractive index of n = 1.5 and a light transmissionof 25%, we can calculate the ratios - using the samesimpliied approach as mentioned above - as follows:
Ratio “disturbing light/usable light” without AR of4.3/25 = I 7.2% - much worse than with non-absorbing lenses - and with AR of 0.5/27 = 1.8%.
This shows that sunglass wearers in particular alsoderive a real beneit from using AR coated lenses.
By Dr V. Bondesan & M Witzany, Satis Vacuum
Material Reflectance Transmittance
each surface uncoated
surfaces
CR39 1.498 4.0% 92%
Glass 1.523 4.3% 91.6%
Poly 1.59 4.8% 90.5%
Glass 1.60 5.3% 89.6%
Glass 1.66 6.0% 88%
Glass 1.706 6.8% 86.8%
Resin 1.74 7.3% 85.6%
Glass 1.802 8.2% 84.3%
Glass 1.90 9.6% 81.6%
34 The Norville Rx Companion
Norville has invested heavily in the latest technology allowing us to provide your patients with a practical solution to their visual comfort when it comes to reflection reduction.
Using the latest Satisloh Ioncote deposition vacuum technology, we can apply up to seven layers of coating to each side of the lens, reducing reflections over a wide band of wavelengths, hence the expression “Broadband”.
Application of the coating subjects the lens to a whole range of cleaning, preparation and evaporation procedures. Much of this is carried out within the confines of the computer controlled vacuum chamber.
For added patient confidence all our resin reflection free coatings have added Cleancote final surface deposition.
Why are some multi-coats more durable than others?It’s all due to the variables, which are:a) Lens material substrateb) The type of hard coat applied to the lensc) The pre-processing regimed) Vacuum machine techniquese) Process integrityf) Rigid adherence to prescribed operating procedures
The MAR coating of resin lenses is still an unpredictable science. Recent developments that have not helped are a multiplicity of hardcoats already applied to lenses before we receive them, the arrival of Transitions and new mid and high index products. The key to success is to ensure that the adhesion layer on each lens surface is perfect. If you apply the analogy of painting, its the difference between primer, undercoat and top coat, so if some of those vary or are omitted altogether then premature failure of the coating is likely. One application undercoat and gloss coat is not in our view a correct option.
MAR - Multi Anti Reflection CoatingRF - Reflection Free Coating
Reflection Free Coatings
8
6
8
8
0
400 500 600 700 800
IONCOTE KAPPA - High Perfomance RF Coating
IONCOTE KAPPA is the latest RF coating for ophthalmic applications developed by Satisloh.
This new process provides antistatic properties and better optical and mechanical quality. The processalso achieves anti-radiation properties for low energy electromagnetic ields, in fact the measurement at the frequency of 1 KHz shows an attenuation of 85% of the electromagnetic ield intensity. This process is completed with a newly developed easy-to-clean top coat
The antistatic properties are very useful to reduce the tendency of the lens to attract dust, reducing the need of frequent cleanings and therefore the possible scratching. The new optical properties guarantee higher performance in the colour repeatability, lower colour difference between the centre and the border on the lenses. Finally, the improved mechanical properties guarantee a higher abrasion resistance on lacquered lenses.
35The Norville Rx Companion
F.A.Q. - Reflection Free Coatings (I)
Although it is some years since we posed some frequently asked questions to a recognised expert in the materials and the coating industry : Dr. Werner Lobsiger, a physicist and thin-film specialist, they are still as relevant today.
What is the best process for applying antireflection coatings to ophthalmic lenses?There is no best coating process. There are several that rate from useful to good. Aside from the process itself, there are a number of factors that govern the quality of coating systems, such as the condition of the vacuum system, cleaning the substrate, the vapour-deposited materials, proper maintenance and operation of the coating equipment and, of course, continuous product quality control.
Are there currently any coated plastic ophthalmic lenses that can match glass lenses in terms of durability and fitness for everyday service?No, there is no such process yet - or to put it another way, until some completely novel plastic is developed, these qualities cannot be achieved with the coating processes known at present.
Can plastic ophthalmic lenses be rendered “as hard as glass” by coating?Only glass is “as hard as glass”. Coated plastic lenses simply have a thin hard coating, and while the coating may have this property, the much thicker substrate (the lens material) cannot. Think of a layer of ice on a “frozen” pond : if you apply a load to the thin ice it breaks or at least it cracks, but the water underneath yields. The plastic material does the same.
Why can we not simply make the hard coating thicker?There have been many attempts to do just that, but the results have been unsatisfactory. The plastic ophthalmic lens and the thin-film system applied to it have completely different physical properties. The plastic lens is made of an organic material; it is heat-sensitive, soft and elastic, and it has a large coefficient of thermal expansion. The coating of inorganic materials, on the other hand, is not sensitive to heat; it is hard and brittle, and it expands less than the substrate when heated. As a result, stresses arise and lead to cracking and detachment. For this reason, maximum hardness is no longer the paramount objective. A balance between hardness and elasticity is much better.
But is it conceivable to make plastic as hard as silicate glass?Anything is conceivable, for development never stands still. But the trend in ophthalmics is the opposite: toward lighter, thinner, and therefore even softer lenses. Hard coatings are indispensable for such lenses if they are to meet the requirements of daily use.
What does the phrase “integral coating process” mean?The overall coating system on a plastic ophthalmic lens, of course, has three components, each performing its own function: 1) The hard coating, directly on the substrate (often with an intermediate coating to improve adhesion), which is intended to impart the desired surface hardness to the product.2) The antireflection coatings to enhance transmission. These also produce the characteristic reflection colours. They are applied on top of the hard coating.3) The protective coating, a hydrophobic material that repels water and dirt and blocks air from the lens.
“Integral coating process” is the new term for a process in which these three components are applied in a single production step. Such processes are nothing new in the treatment of ophthalmic lenses; they have been on the market for years and some of them deliver very high quality.
36 The Norville Rx Companion
F.A.Q. - Reflection Free Coatings (II)
What does “plasma” mean and what function does it have in connection with cutting reflection?A plasma is a highly ionised gas. A variety of plasmas have been used for years in vacuum coating processes, including those used in ophthalmic optics. What is of interest is ion bombardment, usually with argon ions. Compression depends entirely on the energy of the ions that strike the coating. There is no doubt that major improvement in coatings can be achieved by this technique.
When coatings are applied with ion bombardment, can they not become detached in daily service?Experience confirms that detachment is not impossible. Like other problems with coatings, detachment results from a wide range of causes, such as the condition of the vacuum system, substrate cleaning, process technique, deposited materials, surface quality and so forth.
What kind of coatings are there today? What functions do they perform?The point of a hard coating is to protect the plastic ophthalmic lens against external physical effects, that is, to enhance its scratch and abrasion resistance and thus improve its service qualities. Proven methods included applying hard lacquer coatings, plasma polymerisation (such as Diaplas), and depositing a hard coating in vacuum (such as IONCOTE ZB). The optimal resistance of a coating is always a compromise between hardness and elasticity. The rule of thumb is this: the harder (and thus the more brittle) the coating, the greater the risk of cracking and detachment.
Do plastic ophthalmic lenses consistently have hard inorganic coatings to protect the sensitive antireflection coatings?As I already mentioned, the antireflection coating is always on the outside, over the hard coating. This is for physical reasons. The hardcoating therefore cannot protect the antireflection coating from the outside. What is more, the antireflection component of an “integral” coating system (which can include over 10 individual layers in all) is made up of several different materials, so that it cannot be thought of as a consistent, homogeneous inorganic coating.
Can scratching and detachment also occur in “integral” coating systems?In this connection the words “integral” and “integrated” often give rise to misunderstandings and false hopes. These coating systems do not exhibit any special protective qualities in practice, and it is impossible to prevent scratching and detachment in them just as in all other coating systems.
Dirt- and water-repelling
(hydrophobic) protection
layer
Hard layer (approx. 10 to 15
times as thick as the multiple
antirelection layer system)
Multilayer antirelection
coatings
Adhesion or bond layer
Plastic lens
Basic design of a coatingsystem for plastic lenses
37The Norville Rx Companion
F.A.Q. - Reflection Free Coatings (III)
What advantages does a hydrophobic or “clean” coating offer?As the outermost layer and hence the one in closest contact with the air, such a coating acts to reduce friction and to keep water and dirt from the surface. The word “hydrophobic” indeed means water-repelling. Hydrophobic coatings are widely used today and are part of the state of the art.
Are there plastics for ophthalmic lenses that cannot accommodate antireflection coatings?Of course, some plastic materials are easier to coat than others. This problem is becoming more important with the trend to softer and thinner lenses. The industry, that is, the vendor of high-vacuum equipment, has the task of devising solutions. Past history shows that the industry is well able to do this.
How much information do coating quality tests provide?It depends on how they are designed. To get useful results, accepted methods must be used to identify the governing factors, and this means long-term tests on large numbers of lenses. It is known from practice that dissatisfaction arises, as a rule, after a pair of glasses has been worn for two to nine months. Straight laboratory tests cannot predict this outcome because most tests give a “snapshot” of lens performance. Test methods under lab conditions thus provide only a limited amount of information. If more dependable results are wanted, long-term testing on large lots of current production is indispensable. The following are the four leading tests used in practice : - Abrasion test (mechanical friction on the coating with a well-defined contact pressure)- Boiling salt water test (2 minutes boiling, 1 minute cooling in cold water, repeated 8-10 times)- Ultrasonic test with caustic- Bayer test (rocking gently to and fro in sand)
What, today, is anticipated in terms of residual reflection in broadband antireflection coatings? The degree to which reflections are supposed is really of secondary importance to the customer, the person wearing the spectacles, who is used to values generally lying in the desirable range below 1%. On the other hand, the consumer is very interested in the colour and effect of the residual reflection. A soft green is preferred now. The customer’s wishes therefore take priority, and wishes are influenced by fashion and taste, which are purely subjective factors. It is the job of technology and marketing to fulfil these wishes.
Antireflection coating for organic lenses
38 The Norville Rx Companion
91
Glass (Mineral) Lens Availability
Reference Index of Refraction (n) - A measure of the ability of a lens material to refract or bend a ray light of given wavelength, the higher the index the more refractive power.
1.900
1.802
1.700
1.600to
1.604
1.523
RefractiveIndex n= Material
Abbe (V)Value
SpecificGravity
Approx.UV Cut Off
Tints Edge SubsWeightCentre Subs Weight
60mm Round +10.00DS 60mm Round -10.00DS
GlassVeryHighIndex
GlassVeryHighIndex
GlassHighIndex
GlassRegularIndex
GlassMid
Index
30 4.0 340nm
35 3.7 350nm
35 3.2 360nm
42 2.6 330nm
58 2.5 300nm
% DifferenceCompared
with CrownGlass
% DifferenceCompared
with CrownGlass
% DifferenceCompared
with CrownGlass
% DifferenceCompared
with CrownGlass
-38.8% +1.8% -40.7% +4.8%
-32.7% +2.6% -34.3% +4.8%
-12.2%
Not Possible
Vacuum Tints
Vacuum Tints
SolidPhotochromicVacuum Tints
PhotochromicVacuum Tints
-8.2% -13.9% -8.0%
-24.5% -10.3% -25.9% -8.9%
Glass Photochromic Lenses
Photogrey (PGX) 1.52
Photobrown (PBX) 1.52
Photogrey Thin & Dark (PGTD) 1.52
Photogrey (PGX) 1.60
Photobrown (PBX) 1.60
Photogrey TD Equitint 1.70
Photogrey TD Equitint 1.80
Photogrey TD Equitint 1.90
n=Type Photochromic Transmission Values
87
87
22
22
50%LUMINOUS TRANSMISSION FACTOR
0%DARK
100%LIGHT
14
85
84
23
27
2492
2492
2492
39The Norville Rx Companion
Apart from the accepted medical use, although increasingly
used in veterinary and dental procedures X-Rays are
increasingly being used in industry to detect, for example,
internal faults in metal or welds. Sufficient lead screening
is normally used, however individuals may still be at risk.
Research indicates that cataracts may develop due to
exposure of handling radio active materials. Eyelid dermatitis
and conjunctivitis may possibly be caused by X-Rays.
The lens is clear (not tinted) and has a refractive index of
1.80, density 5.18 g/cm3 and Abbe number 25.4.
Available in single vision and progressive. Not suitable for
toughening.
6.00 63 4.00
MINUS -+ PLUS
Speciality Absorbing Glass
X-Ray Glass
Amethyst. Contrast Enhancement - ACE2
5.00 70 4.00
MINUS -+ PLUS
This lens utilises rare earth compounds in its composition to
achieve unique colour enhancing characteristics. This concept
works by selectively positioning transmissions across the
spectral regions. This helps to improve colour discrimination
between different colour objects. Use for hot glass workers,
also other high ambient light conditions, glowing heat
sources e.g. kilns, acetylene torch work in jewellery,
enamelling also leisure and occupational activities including
golf and in particular VDU usage comfort. Although it has a
low luminous transmittance of 38%, it is not recommended
for sun protection (poor UV absorbtion). Passes traffic signal
requirements to BS EN 1836.
n = 1.523 Abbe value 54 Density 2.80 g/cm3
Single vision & progressive
Note: Sometimes described as Blue Didymium.
Rose Didymium discontinued 2011.
ACE2 Bonded Photogrey PTD
5.00 70 4.00
MINUS -+ PLUS
ACE2, whilst not recommended for outdoor strong sun, yet
is a lens with contrast enhancement, especially useful for
sporting applications. Adding a photogrey bonded front
layer transforms the transmission from 38% to 13%.
n = 1.523 Abbe value 54 Density 2.80 g/cm3
Single vision & progressive
Dark State
Light State
40 The Norville Rx Companion
This lens features high absorption of blue light. This provides for clear object definition under cloudy, hazy or foggy conditions, while maintaining high visible light transmittance.It absorbs 100% of UVA and UVB in addition to the violet and blue regions of the spectrum. It also has a high luminous transmittance of 82%. Due to its high visible transmittance and low infrared absorption it should not be used for sun protection unless it is coated. With vacuum deposition coatings this is an excellent base material for sunwear. Recommended for sporting applications e.g. shooting, for which toughening is available. n = 1.523 Abbe value 49.3 Density 2.55 g/cm3
Single Vision and Progressive.
3.00 70 4.00
MINUS -+ PLUS
3.00 70 4.00
MINUS -+ PLUS
Speciality Tinted Glass
+8.00 Base available for wraparound frames
3.00 10.00 10.5070
65
MINUS -+ PLUS
Grey Ray.
Green/grey. (UV400)
Yellow (UV480).
A crown 1.523 index alternative to the Rayban G15. It’s colour is a green/grey in 15%LTF, with a similar transmission plot as the Rayban, available in a +8.00 base for wraparound frames. It is also suitable for toughening. Absorbing 100% UVA and UVB plus 50% of IR, it is ideal for climbing.n = 1.523 Abbe value 58 Density 2.55g/cm3
Single Vision and Progressive.
This lens features nearly total absorption of UV wavelength below 400nm. In this visible region of the spectrum, transmission is controlled with peaks in the blue, green and red ranges. This results in the colour enhancing effect, using technology developed for the aerospace industry. Recommended for high quality sun protection with a visible transmittance of 15% at 400nm. Neutral grey in natural light, when viewed indoors under fluorescent or other light, appears green. n = 1.597 Abbe value 43.3 Density 2.86 g/cm3
Single Vision and Progressive.
41The Norville Rx Companion
Companion Tint Transmission Charts
GlassTints
GlassTints
NB The tints are the same for Resin lenses however the spectral plots will be slightly different.
B80 Glass & Resin 75 1 Light tint - not suitable for night driving B65 “ “ “ 65
B35 “ “ “ 32 2 Medium tint - not suitable for night driving B25 “ “ “ 22
G88 “ “ “ 79
G75 “ “ “ 68 1 Light tint - not suitable for night driving
G40 “ “ “ 54
COMPANION TINT CLASSIFICATION (according to EN 1836 : 1997)
TINT CODE MATERIAL TRANSMISSION % FILTER CATEGORY & COMMENTS
42 The Norville Rx Companion
Trifocal - E Line.
50% Inter 7 mmn = 1.50
Double Trifocal - Shaped Segments.Double D Seg
60% Add or Same Add Top & BottomSeparation 14mmDD28n = 1.50
Bifocal - E Line.
*On the line n = 1.50
Resin Bifocal and Trifocal Segment Specifications and Index Availability
and * Optical Centre Position
Bifocal - Shaped Segments. C28 (28 x 19) S25 (25 x 17) S28 (28 x 19) S35 (35 x 22) S40 (40 x 20) S45 (45 x 24)
*5 mm below *4.5 mm below *5 mm below *4.5 mm below * on the *1.5 mm below seg top seg top seg top seg top seg top seg top n = 1.50 n = 1.50 n = 1.50 n = 1.50 n = 1.50 n = 1.50 n = 1.60 n = 1.53 n = 1.59 n = 1.66 n = 1.59 n = 1.74 n = 1.60 n = 1.66
Bifocal - Round Segments. Round 15 Round 22 Round 24/25 Round 28 Round 38/40 Round 45
*8mm below *11mm below *12mm below *14mm below *19mm below *22mm below below seg top seg top seg top seg top seg top seg top n = 1.50 n = 1.50 n = 1.50 n = 1.50 n = 1.50 n = 1.50 n = 1.60
Trifocal - Shaped Segments.S728 S835 S1435
50% Inter Add 28 x 7 50% Inter Add 35 x 8 60% Inter Add 35 x 14Reading 28 x 11 Reading 35 x 20 Reading 35 x 30n = 1.50 n = 1.50 n = 1.50n = 1.59
43The Norville Rx Companion
Lenses for the Relief of Heterophoria
Unfortunately, following the supply demise of our Resin E Style prism segment bifocal, the number
of options in which horizontal prism corrections in near or distance only is now seriously limited.
Glass prism control in a 30mm round seg is your most optically accurate option.
Horizontal prism correction can be achieved by the following lens types:
1) A grossly decentered D segment, preferably one that comes in an 80mm lens blank.
Please find below a chart showing the amount of extra insert required to induce the listed horizontal
prism.
The difficulty with this method is enabling enough segment to be visible to ensure a useable reading area
for the wearer. The diagram below highlights this concern.
Example - 12m/m Inwards Decentration
2) Franklin Split bi-prism (see page 46).
3) Prism Controlled solid bifocals (see page 45).
1∆
+1.00
1.5∆
2∆
2.5∆
3∆
3.5∆
+1.25 +1.50 +1.75 +2.00 +2.25 +2.50 +2.75 +3.00
10 8
12
7
10
11
9
6
10
8
5
11 10
12
12 11
9 8
11 10
6
5
3
7
5
4
8
6
4
9
7
4
✕
✕
✕
✕
✕
✕
✕
✕
✕
✕
✕
✕
✕
✕ ✕
✕ ✕
✕ ✕ ✕ ✕✕
∆ Base In
Approximate amount of extra segment inset (in mm) for base in, induced at near only. D45 bifocal.
WARNING:- Variable with Rx / Eyesize / Decentration -The greater the decentration the smaller the eyesize glazable.
44 The Norville Rx Companion
Anisometropia.
It is suggested that spectacle wearers can tolerate binocularly up to 1.5 dioptres of anisometropia (vertical
imbalance). Optically this can be corrected in a number of ways :
a) Unequal segment sizes - Round Segments.
Although visually a little strange for beholders of those wearing such combinations, a 24mm round bifocal
in one eye with a 45mm bifocal segment in the other, in reading addition of +2.00 will provide an extra 2
dioptres of prism difference. Whilst +3.00 addition contributes a full 3.5 prism dioptres. This effect in both
glass and resin materials is due to the variation of the reading optical centres (10mm in the case above).
Prismatic Effect at N.V.P. due to the Segment (Additional Prism).
N.V.P. assumed 5mm below segment summit, all prismatic effects Base down.
Lenses for the relief of Anisometropia Induced Prism
Prismatic effect at NVP for various shaped
segment designs. Value is shown for a 1.00
add (for 2.00 add double the amount etc.)
Prisms under 0.05 dioptres are classed as nil.
S25 x 17 Nil base DN
S28 x 19 Nil base DN
S35 x 22 Nil base DN
S40 x 20 0.5 base DN
S45 x 22.5 0.6 base UP
b) Unequal segment sizes - Shaped Segments.
Due to their construction, segments other than round are not so useful. The physical optical centre of a
Fused D25 segment (17mm deep) is 25mm ÷ 2 = 12.5mm, so 17mm - 12.5mm = 4.5mm, the optical centre
being 4.5mm below the seg top, just the point around which we consider our NVP calculations to be
based.
We list the other shaped segments:
0.3 Base down 0.7 base down 0.9 base down 1.0 base down 1.4 base down 1.5 base down 1.8 base down
0.3 Base down 0.9 base down 1.1 base down 1.3 base down 1.8 base down 1.9 base down 2.2 base down
0.4 Base down 1.1 base down 1.4 base down 1.5 base down 2.1 base down 2.3 base down 2.6 base down
0.4 Base down 1.2 base down 1.6 base down 1.8 base down 2.5 base down 2.6 base down 3.1 base down
0.5 Base down 1.4 base down 1.8 base down 2.0 base down 2.8 base down 3.0 base down 3.5 base down
0.6 Base down 1.6 base down 2.0 base down 2.3 base down 3.2 base down 3.4 base down 3.9 base down
0.6 Base down 1.8 base down 2.3 base down 2.5 base down 3.5 base down 3.8 base down 4.4 base down
0.7 Base down 1.9 base down 2.5 base down 2.8 base down 3.9 base down 4.1 base down 4.8 base down
0.8 Base down 2.1 base down 2.7 base down 3.0 base down 4.2 base down 4.5 base down 5.3 base down
0.8 Base down 2.3 base down 2.9 base down 3.3 base down 4.6 base down 4.9 base down 5.7 base down
0.9 Base down 2.5 base down 3.2 base down 3.5 base down 4.9 base down 5.3 base down 6.1 base down
0.9 Base down 2.6 base down 3.4 base down 3.8 base down 5.3 base down 5.6 base down 6.6 base down
1.0 Base down 2.8 base down 3.6 base down 4.0 base down 5.6 base down 6.0 base down 7.0 base down
+1.00
+1.25
+1.50
+1.75
+2.00
+2.25
+2.50
+2.75
+3.00
+3.25
+3.50
+3.75
+4.00
NearAddition
15mmRound Segment
24mmRound Segment
28mmRound Segment
40mmRound Segment
45mmRound Segment
30mm GLASSRound Segment
38mm GLASSRound Segment
45The Norville Rx Companion
Lenses for the relief of Anisometropia Induced Prism
c) Bi-prism (Slab Off) Bifocals/Multifocals.
These glass bifocals or multifocals can be adapted :-
Crown Glass SV, E Style, D25, D28, D35, D725, D728, D735, selected progressives - All white or
photochromic
1.7 Index SV, Progressives
and the following resin lenses :-
Standard CR39 E Style, S25, S28, S35, S725, S728, S835, S1435, S1128, E Style Trifocals - white,
or Transitions where available, selected progressives - white or Transitions,
Mid Index 1.6 S28, selected progressives.
A bi-prism lens is technically achieved by surfacing the concave rear surface with BASE UP prism (minimum
value 2.0∆) of equal value to the imbalance between the right and left prescriptions over the entire lens
i.e. distance and reading, usually the lens of the pair with the greater base down prism. Then, (and this
is the clever bit!) we remove that same prism but now from the front of the lens but stopping (we have
started at the top as we are creating a base down prism) just before we reach the segment line.
We now have a lens with base up prism but only as far up as the segment top, now leaving the distance
portion prism free again as it was before all this started.
Well this is how it works for glass, resin lenses are really challenging as due to the segment bulge all the
above needs to take place on the inside surface only! Which perhaps explains why slabbing off is the
pinnacle of Rx lens making skills. Remember slab offs can only provide a variation in vertical prism. The
special skill and indeed difficulty is achieving a neat, straight slab line coincident with the segment line.
Some higher index resins are too soft to produce a clean line, the reason why some higher index materials
e.g. polycarbonate cannot be slabbed.
d) Franklin Split An alternative is to resort to an old E Style Franklin Split and to Norbond (see page 47)
two half lenses together, one reading portion carrying the corrective vertical prism. Remember in all of
the above its only one lens that is needed with segment prism, the other half pair being just a standard
bifocal.
e) Prism Controlled A specific vertical prism outcome in the reading only can also be obtained using a
prism controlled solid bifocal, further details on the following page.
f) Presto A round or flat top segment button pressed into the appropriate aperture formed in a
single vision lens. Effective for correcting prisms, differing cylinders for near, even white segments in a
photochromic carrier. Pronounced edges can be an issue.
1.5
S.V.
1.55
1.586(Poly)
1.60
1.67
D Seg.Varifocal
Min ∆to slab
Max ∆to slab
3 3
3
3
3
1.5
1.5
1.5Approx
10*
3
✕✕
3
3
✕
3
3 3
3** 1.5
Type
Indices
Approx10*
Approx10*
Approx10*
*Dependent on blank substance** Can not slab Gen 6
46 The Norville Rx Companion
Prism controlled solid bifocal lens, surely the most versatile prism segment lens of all, allows a knowledgeable optical technician to achieve separate control of prismatic elements in both the distance and near portions. Unlike lenses for the control of anisometropia, whose correction is only for the vertical prismatic element, a prism controlled lens can correct prism vertically, horizontally and any oblique angle with simultaneity. Although only available in a glass solid bifocal 30mm segment design, this lens is unique. Think of a prism controlled bifocal as having a segment which also comes with up to 6 prism dioptres, whose apex can be spun in any direction through 360 degrees.
Glass 30mm prism controlled solid bifocals are concave polished semi-finished lens blanks with a distance and reading segment (30%) portion. Your laboratory then surfaces convex spherical or toric curves on the front surface. We can provide 1 to 6 dioptres prism corrections in 0.50 prism steps. Adds +0.50 to +4.00 in 0.25 steps. The prism base is the position on the segment rim with the less prominent step against the distance portion of the lens. Also available in photochromic glass.
During calculation of the effective prism at the N.V.P. consideration is made of the distance Rx sphere and cylinder, the reading add and any prescribed prism. Calculating this for both the right and left eyes will enable a conclusion to be made of any imbalance enabling assessment of how great a correcting prism is required and in what direction it should be placed to obtain the final prism as specified by the Rx.
Truly a very interesting lens which, over the last 60 years, has provided many tens of thousands of wearers with comfortable binocular vision who otherwise would only achieve monocular vision or revert to two pairs of single vision, hardly a high tech. solution.
Segment Prism Correction by Direction
Vertical Horizontal Oblique
Solid bifocal G Solid 30mm bifocal G Solid 30mm bifocal G Franklin G/P Franklin G/P Franklin G/P ‘D’ Bifocal Slab Off G/P Fresnel P Fresnel P ‘D’ Trifocal Slab Off G/P Grossly’ decentered Progressive Slab Off G/P S35, S40, S45 P E Style Bifocal Slab Off G/P D35 G Unequal segment sizes G/P Fresnel P
(G = Glass, P = Plastic/Resin)
Prism Controlled Lenses (Glass)
30mm segment prism controlled - actual lens blank size
References Page 138 “Ophthalmic Lenses and Dispensing” Mo Jalie
Definitive reference Solid Bifocals H.H.Emsley and A.A.S.Moore published by UK Optical (Ukobal Technical Print No. 9) Historical print Copt. Library
47The Norville Rx Companion
We use the term Norbond to describe the bonding of two (or perhaps more) pieces of glass using a permanent bonding agent that is unaffected by the elements. There are many applications for this process. For example, flat glass lenses can be Norbonded to the back of a faceplate from a diving mask.
Segments can be Norbonded to single vision lenses where due to nature of occupation or hobby the segment has to be in an “unusual” place or shape, or indeed when Rx is such that to make from conventional bifocals would not be possible.
When high power or larger blanks than listed are required, or different prism amounts in distance and reading are needed then perhaps a Franklin bifocal could be of use, the components being Norbonded to form one single lens.
Lenticulars are another application.
Out of range bifocals or trifocals can be produced by taking a very thin lens containing the segment and Norbonding it to a single vision semi-finished to create an extra thick blank that can be surfaced in the normal manner.
Equitint solid tinted or photochromic lenses canalso be created by Norbonding a layer of tinted material to a powered lens which can be either standard Crown glass or any higher index.
Due to the need for the photochromatic layer to be on the front of the lens, the process is really only suited to minus prescription when a photochromic element is involved.
AR coating can be applied but only when lenses are in their separate component parts. On Franklin type lenses we do not apply any form of AR or vacuum coating due to the complex nature and additional handling required during glazing.
It is not possible to Norbond toughened lenses.
It is only possible to Norbond glass to glass i.e. we cannot Norbond resin.
Norbonded lenses can be fitted to plastic and metal rims but not supras and rimless.
Norbonding has many applications - “To make the “impossible possible” please enquire.
Norbond
OR
Top halfdistanceportion
Bottom halfreadingportion
Components of a Franklin
plus and minussplit bifocals
OR
Equitint Lenses
48 The Norville Rx Companion
Part II
Rx ALLSORTS
orA Kaleidoscope
of Rx House Working Details
49The Norville Rx Companion
Lens Forms
Plus cyl v Minus cyl form.
It’s worth considering or having knowledge of the fact that in “bygone” times, unlike today, it was common practice to produce lenses with front toric surfaces, that is, made in plus cyl form (solid glass bifocals are still made this way).
Front surface torics, whilst optically performing better than back (minus cyl) surface torics had several drawbacks.
Firstly, a lens made in plus cyl form had a tendency to be thicker than its minus cyl form counterpart.
Secondly, especially with oblique cyls, the lens form tended to distort the frame shape when glazed. A minus cyl form toric presents a spherical surface to the front thus reducing this phenomenon, the toric surface being towards the back “out of sight”.
Finally, from a manufacturing point of view, a lens made in plus cyl toric form had to have both its base and cross curve compensated for vertex power allowance. Lenses made in minus cyl toric form may only require the front sphere (single) curve to be compensated.
Ranges.
How often the words “out of range” brings on that sinking feeling. Why so unpredictable? Well mostly it’s down to that “wandering” axis. Depending on its setting it sometimes enables us to extend the stated range by allowing a thinner lens to be crafted - and at other times the opposite effect.
For example, assuming the lenses are made in minus cyl form, then a plus lens with its minus cyl axis at 90 i.e. +10.00DS -2.00DC x 90 has its lowest power in the horizontal meridian.
An optical cross demonstrates this very easily (see figure A). Due to the fact that the lowest power meridian (+8.00) is in the horizontal direction and that eyeshapes are generally wider than they are deeper, it means the lens can take on an oval shape or even “waste away” top and bottom and still be sufficient to glaze into a frame. The lens will also be of minimum substance as it is the +8.00 meridian rather than the +10.00 that is controlling the final centre thickness.
Minus powers work out “best” when the minus cyl axis is in the region of 180 i.e. -12.00DS +2.00DC x 90 (-10.00DS -2.00DC x 180). Figure B demonstrates that the meridian of lowest power (-10.00) is horizontal. As with the previous example the area of highest power is vertical, and as eyeshapes are generally wider than they are deeper, this too means the resulting lens will be of minimum edge substance, the higher power being over the least diameter.
It also means that if, because of the Rx, we cannot fully “open up the blank” to full aperture, it doesn’t matter as any resulting “witness” will be at the extremity of the vertical meridian where the diameter is reduced in comparison to the horizontal meridian.
+10.00
+8.00 +8.00
+10.00Fig A
-12.00
-10.00 -10.00
-12.00Fig B
50 The Norville Rx Companion
Lens Base Curves
Base Curves.Increasingly we find customers who no longer consider Best Form lens design to be their prime criterion; cosmetic appearance is their priority. We have the ability to log your account number onto our computer so that for an individual account requiring cosmetic appearance as first priority it will always select a 2.00D lower base than usual. However, if you are only occasionally likely to need a lower base then please state at time of ordering “use lower base curve” or state the actual front surface dioptric curve you would prefer and we will work to the nearest that is available. Remember these are usually only in 2.00D steps
Of course, much of the above is becoming less relevant as specifying an aspheric lens will ensure that you obtain lenses of the best cosmetic appearance, manufactured with the flattest curves and with little deterioration in visual quality. However, it should be remembered that even aspherics can differ, from a relatively simple aspheric, if you can call them that, to the ultimate digital (freeform) lens design.
Finished Single Vision
Modern FlatterBase Curves
All Torics in MINUS cyl form
Original 1950sBest Form Base Curves
All Torics in PLUS cyl form
5.25 0.00 5.25 5.50 0.25 5.00 5.75 0.50 4.75 6.00 0.75 5.00 6.25 1.00 4.75 6.00 1.25 5.00 6.25 1.50 4.75 6.50 1.75 4.50 6.25 2.00 4.75 6.50 2.25 4.50 6.25 2.50 4.25 6.50 2.75 4.50 6.75 3.00 4.25 7.00 3.25 4.00 6.75 3.50 3.75 7.00 3.75 3.50 7.25 4.00 3.25 7.50 4.25 3.50 7.25 4.50 3.25 7.50 4.75 3.50 7.75 5.00 3.25 8.00 5.25 3.00 8.25 5.50 2.75 8.50 5.75 2.50 8.75 6.00 2.25 8.50 6.25 8.75 6.50 9.00 6.75 9.25 7.00 9.50 7.25 9.75 7.50 10.00 7.75 10.25 8.00
Plus Dioptres Minus
BaseCurve
BaseCurve
Power
51The Norville Rx Companion
Lens Base Curves
Base Curves II
Appreciating the relevance of base curve variation may today seem a little used requirement, excepting where rimless mounts are concerned. Assessment between those models having a front or rear drilling location can be critical, as variations in the lens base curves will result in the designed splay angle of the sides (head width) changing from its standard 6.00 base carrier lens curve (Fig. 1). Using too shallow a lens base results in a frame having sides with pronounced over splay (Fig. 2).
For this reason wrap-around sun specs (generally known as “8.00 base”) will require lenses to be especially surfaced to a higher than normal lens base so that the lens bevel when edged can maintain the design contour of the frame. This is only possible providing the sunspec is actually a glazeable model, as many (non-ophthalmic) are manufactured without a glazing vee bevel, having only a lat slot into which a 2mm plano lat edged lens is itted, yet this does not work when thicker powered lenses are used. Also many wrap-around sunspec designs have a higher stepped rear bevel which often can only be accommodated by using a special proile bevel cutting wheel.
Practices must proceed with caution when suggesting a wrap-around sunspec could be glazed to patient’s Rx. Most competent sunspec suppliers will advise this possibility at the time of supply. When metal wrap sun specs are concerned a check that they have been actually made with an opening glazing block is a useful starter!
Fig. 1 Correct head width Fig. 2 Incorrect - over splayed sides
PS: A lens clock is an ever essential piece of practice equipment.
It is well worth checking sunspec lens curves as it can be visually confusing - what may appear to be a +8.00 base may only be a +6.00 base.
-6.00 BaseLenses
-2.25 BaseLenses
52 The Norville Rx Companion
Aspheric
Aspherics.Asphericity is a gradual change in the curvature of a lens calculated to reduce the effects of oblique
aberrations. Reduction of aberrations means better visual acuity for the patient.
In the 1900s stock SV lenses were just small flat curve single vision. In an attempt to improve patient’s
vision, along came meniscus and best form toric lenses. This was the first effort to reduce annoying
aberrations by adapting the lens curves.
With the possibility of larger eyesizes there were then cosmetic considerations. Patients wanted less
bulbous lenses. Manufacturers found that by reducing the front curvature the appearance of the lenses
was significantly enhanced, however this “flattening” of the front curve increased optical aberrations.
Calculation and research gave us a new aspheric lens surface. If a lens measure is placed on a conventional
convex surface the reading would be constant regardless of where it is placed i.e. it is spherical.
If one repeats this exercise on an aspheric lens one will immediately see the change of curvature across the
surface. Thus an aspherical surface is spherical at its centre but becomes astigmatic as you move away from
the central optical axis. This gradual change in curvature differs between plus power and minus power
lenses. The curvature of a plus powered lens gradually flattens as you move from centre to edge.
A minus powered lens is just the opposite, and gradually steepens as you move towards the edge.
These are rotationally symmetrical aspherics.
An aspheric lens “bends” light rays differently than a spherical lens and therefore can be made flatter,
thinner and lighter than its spherical counterpart. While this is more dramatic in high plus powers the
effects and visual benefits are achieved in any power. The advantages of aspheric lenses to the patient
are numerous. Aspheric lenses have flatter curves, up to 40% flatter than conventional spherical surfaces.
Being less bulbous, lenses look much better. Unwanted magnification of the patient’s eyes is reduced by
up to 30% by the use of aspheric designs, whilst still reducing the aberrations just like conventional best
form designs i.e. oblique astigmatism and curvature error. Aspherics provide patients with slimmer, more
attractive lenses. Because of this they are lighter.
Whilst traditionally aspherics were used for high plus prescriptions or low vision aids, they have developed
so much that they are now used for a range of powers from very low to very high in both plus and minus
prescriptions. It is important to remember to place the optical centre so that the optical axis of the lens
passes through the eye’s centre of rotation. The optical centre should be decentred vertically 0.5mm from
the zero visual direction for every 1 degree of pantoscopic tilt. The lenses should be fitted as close to the
eyes as possible but remember owing to the flatter inside curves you need to consider eyelash problems.
Unlike some non aspheric lens forms, prism should not be provided by decentration with an aspheric lens.
It is essential that the pole of the surface should coincide with the visual axis of each eye. This would not
be the case if prism were achieved by decentration, however, it is possible to incorporate prescribed prism
during surfacing without any detrimental effect to the vision perceived through the lens, providing the
prismatic lens is compensated by decentration in the direction of the prism apex.
The flatter curves of an aspheric lens may cause reflections to be noticed by the subject. For this reason,
aspheric lenses should be supplied with a reflection free coating.
Finally, a concluding statement which was written by the late Eric Crundel during the 1930s -
“We therefore emphatically state that no spectacle lenses, other than those embracing aspherical curves,
can be designed to correct all marginal errors or even to provide exactly the same spherical power at the
lens margin as at the centre whilst adequately correcting the marginal astigmatic errors.”
References Chapter 4 “Ophthalmic Lenses and Dispensing” Prof Mo Jalie
53The Norville Rx Companion
New Aspheric.
Suddenly after decades of very little change along comes a rush of new design aspheric lenses!
The new Augen double aspheric available in moulded CR39 semi-i nished addresses that long term challenge whereas the +6.00 element of a +4.00DS +2.00DC Rx was perfectly corrected on say +6.75 base rotationally symmetrical semi-i nished (working minus cylinder form) However, its +4.00 power meridian (or whatever the variation of the cross power) was always going to be over corrected.
By moulding a double aspheric “toric” semi-i nished any cylinder variations from the sphere power might be more individually addressed but even then never 100%.
This term, double aspheric, raised some confusion as Seiko, who had previously been calling a lens bi-aspheric, suddenly changed its name (but not the design), to Double Aspheric and probably need to change it back again! Why you ask? Well if you consider the double aspheric as two aspheric surfaces on one side of the lens, the bi-aspheric, which is also two aspheric surfaces, but now on both sides of the lens. The optical quality of a bi-aspheric is always likely to be better than that of a Double Aspheric and both are better than a RS aspheric.
The real reason for the dramatic change in aspheric designs is today’s availability of free-form production, the ability to calculate, cut and polish a unique aspheric corrected curve in virtually any lens power combination and uniquely, including progressive lenses which are, of course, aspheric designs in themselves.
So combining both lens surfaces as Bi (or Dual) Aspheric form, a rotationally symmetrical front surface aspheric correction with an inside atoroidal free-form production delivers near perfect optics, never before economically achievable in Rx single ophthalmic lenses.
Aspheric
Double AsphericTwo different aspheric curves on one (front) surface.
Semi-i nished Lens Blank.
Rotationally Symmetrical AsphericTraditional Aspheric Semi-i nished
Aspherisedfor sphere power
Aspherisedfor cylinder power
54 The Norville Rx Companion
Free-form
Over the recent years we have been producing this Companion, free-form in manufacturing optics has shot from
obscurity to now dominate the Rx lens production scene. Over the previous 60 years little had really changed.
Lenses (glass) were cut on diamond impregnated cup wheels with water coolant splashing all over the place;
glass is hard, diamond even harder. Those lenses ground to their approximate dioptic curve were then loose
emery “smoothed” to the matching curve of the “master” cast iron tool. Newer machine designs enabled this
to be achieved for toric as well as spherical curves. Eventually a ine smooth lens surface free from holes (left by
Diamond generating process) was obtained before a polishing cloth was afixed onto the same tool ready for
the long polishing process (20 mins) in red rouge or later Cerium polish. Great personal skills were required to
coax quality lenses from such primitive machinery and ancient processes.
Surprisingly, exactly the same procedures were used to surface early CR39 resin and your scribe recalls many
fruitless hours spent trying every variant under the sun (and moon) to get early CR39 to polish without scratches,
eventually running two very separate production lines but still not dissimilar processes over the next 50 years.
Glass volume fell, while CR39 and later other higher index resins increased until they completely swopped their
market share percentages to achieve today’s 99% resin with only 1% glass (mineral).
During 1994 work was afoot in Germany to convert engineering 4 axis CNC milling machines to process precision
optics, grinding astro mirrors and optics plates. Zeiss and Schneider Germany were the irst to achieve this.
As better electronic controllers and linear motors were developed the potential and the beneits of similar
production technology applied to Rx lens production became apparent. The year 2000 saw automated free-
form polishers arriving onto the market and unlike their previous incarnation of simple motorised polishing
spindles these were highly complicated computer driven units. It wasn’t until other irms offered the enabling
software that this free-form production technology became more readily accessible to the marketplace.
Free-form brought a real revolution to manufacturing Rx optics where previously only a spherical or toroidal
lens surface could have been cut on a cup wheel grinder. Now single point diamond tools activated by cad cam
computer aided design deliver the most complex of atoroidal lens surfaces and you can’t get more complicated
than a progressive surface design that also incorporates a cylindrical correction and even perhaps a bi-prism
(slab-off) element. Perhaps a better description of this free-form technology might be Digital Design.
Over the irst twelve years of the 21st Century free-form has grown to be a must-have technology for any serious
ophthalmic lens supplier.
Today our 50 page Digital free-form technical directory (and growing!) outlines the vast array of better high
deinition lens designs that free-form has enabled.
We guarantee patients will appreciate their HD vision.
References Norville Digital Free-form Technical Directory
55The Norville Rx Companion
Compensated Lens Powers
Here’s a topic to raise optical blood pressure!
As investigations into progressive lens itting by lens designers plumbed even greater depths more and more
detailed questions were asked about the “as worn” position Rx and how any deviations from that considered
the norm might further alter the given Rx.
For with even medium powers these were not insigniicant changes to the prescribed Rx.
So, in the relentless progress of chasing that holy grail of zero wearer progressive intolerances many of
the latest calculating programmes for progressive designs now convert all calculations automatically to
compensated powers using default measurement igures unless different data has been supplied.
The new Norville order forms feature this new line for “as worn” calculations.
With pupil size soon as a future
addition
The above are the actual default igures used in the Norville design suite for Sentor, Freeway and Bureau, our
free-form lenses.
Indeed some design programmes will now only calculate using “as worn” input, either the design default
igures or those you alternatively provide. ISO BSI lens tolerances will be based from the “as worn” calculation
i.e. compensated Rx not that of the original Rx. Medium to high Rxs will result in a not inconsiderable shift
in sphere / cyl power and axis. Not all company software systems (Norville included) have so far kept up with
all this information, vis the compensated Rx used by way of reference, conveyed back to you!
Of course these are signiicantly different where an +8.00 base wrap design is required but even small
changes e.g. the standard frame default position, can make a noticeable difference, for instance -5.00 -2.00
35° changes to -4.64 / -2.12 x 41.
See pages 56 & 98 for additional explanations.
TRIAL FRAME TILTSPECTACLE WRAP
COMPENSATEDRX BVD ANGLE ° READ DIST
cmmmmm
Please tick
(3)
14 5 12
56 The Norville Rx Companion
Compensated Lens Powers
IPD - Monocular Centration Distance
SEGHT - Vertical P.R.P. height measured from the lower boxed tangent
HBOX - Horizontal Boxed Lens Size of Frame
DBL - Distance Between Lenses
VBOX - Vertical Boxed Lens Size
TILT - Pantoscopic Angle
WRAP - Frame Wrap Angle
BVD - Back Vertex Distance
NWD - Near Working Distance
WRAP TILT
BVD
UnderstandingDigitalRayPath
The drawing on the left shows a typical setup for measuring lenspower with a lensometer. Notice that the lens surface is placedperpendicular to the ray beam of the instrument. Conventional lenseshave been developed to yield the correct power when being measuredlike this. This type of calculation method is known as nominal powercalculation. It assumes that the same design is good for everyprescription, what we could call a “static” design.
Focimetermeasuringa lens
User powervs. lens meterraypaths
But, the eye's optical system is very different from the optical systemused to measure a lens, as you can see on the left. The eye rotatesaround its center, and the light follows an oblique trajectory thataffects the power experienced by the wearer.
Obliqueerrors in aconventionallens
The drawing on the left illustrates the effect described above. Thisexample shows the power experienced by the wearer of a conventionalSingle Vision lens when looking through various areas of the lens. Thedifference between power experienced and that actually prescribed can be more than 0.5D for a lateral gaze angle of 30º. This effectis known as oblique aberration, and is the main optical aberrationthat cannot be resolved by conventional surfacing techniques.
Digital Ray Pathperformance
This last drawing shows the effect of a lens with the same prescription,calculated with Digital Ray-Path, ground with Free-form equipment.The Power experienced by the wearer is stable on the whole lens,providing perfect vision for every direction of sight.
10
This last drawing shows the effect of a lens with the same prescription,calculated with Digital Ray-Path, ground with Free-form equipment.The Power experienced by the wearer is stable on the whole lens,providing perfect vision for every direction of sight.
Focimetermeasuringa lens
User powervs. lens meterray-paths
Obliqueerrors in aconventionallens
Digital Ray-Pathperformance
The drawing on the left shows a typical setup for measuring lens
power with a lensometer. Notice that the lens surface is placed
perpendicular to the ray beam of the instrument. Conventional lenses
have been developed to yield the correct power when being measured
like this. This type of calculation method is known as nominal power
calculation. It assumes that the same design is good for every
prescription, what we could call a “static” design.
But, the eye’s optical system is very different from the optical systemused to measure a lens, as you can see on the left. The eye rotatesaround its centre; and the light follows an oblique trajectory thataffects the power experienced by the wearer.
The drawing on the left illustrates the effect described above. Thisexample shows the power experienced by the wearer of a conventional Single Vision lens when looking through various areas of the lens. The difference between power experienced and that actually prescribed can be more than 0.5D for a lateral gaze angle of 30°.This effect is known as oblique aberration, and is the main optical aberration that cannot be resolved by conventional surfacing techniques.
Understanding the Rationale
Calculation parameters
57The Norville Rx Companion
Intelligent Prism Thinning
Two forms of Rx lens, Progressives and ‘E’ Style, by nature of their inherent design characteristics are likely
to be thicker than other segment design multi focus lenses.
In the case of Progressives, this is due to changing curvature across the entire lens blank from top to
bottom needed to obtain the gradual increase of power in the intermediate and reading areas of the lens.
The lens will be thicker at the top than at the bottom due its front curve becoming steeper as it traverses
down the lens. E Style lenses suffer similar drawbacks due to the lower reading part of the lens having a
steeper curve than the distance.
Substance considerations for both of these lens types are further complicated by the glazing position. This
is the reason some patients notice certain areas of their lenses are rather thick and cannot understand why.
For example on a plus distance powered Progressive or E Style, it would be very easy for the practitioner
to point to the bottom temporal corner of the glazed lens and show the patient how thin it is. But it is
the thickness in the distance portion that the patient is objecting to! So what can be done? based on the
principle that a prism with its base down is thinner at its top, how could this be utilised on Progressive and
E Style lenses to reduce the thickness?
By incorporating a prism base down either when the semi-finished lens was moulded or at the surfacing
stage by the prescription house (the latter being the normal way of achieving this) the lens could be made
to appear thinner. A figure of two thirds of the add power was therefore a generally accepted ‘prism
norm’. For example, a lens with a +3.00 addition would have 2 dioptres base down prism incorporated. A
lens with an addition of +1.50 would have 1 dioptre prism base down incorporated.
However, when Norville conducted numerous tests and calculations we soon came to the conclusion that
a fixed prism thinning policy for Progressive and E Style lenses was just not satisfactory. It was apparent
that some lenses were actually thicker as a result of prism thinning! How could this be? Size and shape of
frame, particularly depth, were excluded by the standard ‘two thirds base down’ principle, also the vertical
position of the fitting cross was not taken into account. Another disturbing factor was that the direction
of the prism was completely ignored. Prism base down on a plus distance powered lens is understandable
as the thickest element of the standard lens design is at the top, however on a minus distance powered
lens, prism base down actually increases the substance at the lower edge creating a ‘wedge’ shape
appearance that is unsightly.
58 The Norville Rx Companion
Intelligent Prism Thinning
The solution: After much calculation and trial, Intelligent Prism Thinning (I.P.T.) was born at Norville. It
is now totally integrated within our lens design programmes. I.P.T. takes factors such as power, addition,
frame size and shape and fitting cross position into account and attempts to balance the thickness at
the top and bottom while achieving minimum substance when glazed. In some instances this will mean
incorporating traditional base down prism thinning, others none at all or occasionally even prism base up
thinning, whatever gives the thinnest possible lens. It is obviously essential that both prisms be of the same
power so in instances of different powers or fitting cross heights the programme will ‘average out’ the
prism values to achieve the thinnest most balanced pair of spectacles that is possible to obtain.
The prescribing practitioner has nothing to do other than writing out the order. When there is an
accompanying frame to be glazed, this will be traced by our pre-process shape tracing unit, the other
calculations are then processed within the normal NIDES (Norville Integrated Design and Edging System)
facility with the added consideration of I.P.T. where applicable. Similarly, for uncut lens supply rather than
glazed, the presentation of an accurately drawn eye-shape diagram with an indication of lens settings
enables us to provide similar design advantages. This is your opportunity to benefit from the king size
computing power at Norville’s disposal which enables us often to make lenses thinner even than the brand
manufacturers can themselves.
Whilst on the subject of prism thinning. It cannot be taken in total isolation from the Px who is going to
wear those inished spectacles. Some beneit, tolerate or suffer from 1½∆ to 2∆ base down inserted into their
prescription. In order to check we have devised a lorgnette with rotating lenses (plano power 1½∆ or 2∆ base).
These loosely itted round lenses can be rotated to produce base down or up direction even in or out prisms
so that the effect of prism thinning might be checked before ordering those actual lenses.
Prism SpecsRecumbent Model
Prism DownStoop Model
Prism Up
The ultimate in prism glasses has a unique open frame
design with fully adjustable viewing angles which stay
ixed in the necessary position. Flip up function allows
the user to lift up the prism glasses rather than take
them off.
Ultimate ModelAdjustable Prism
59The Norville Rx Companion
Rx Allsorts contd.
Glass Super Lenti.
The Super Lenti is a custom manufactured, blended optics lens for Myopics, which eliminates the unsightly
“bottle bottom” ring appearance of higher powered lenses. Recommended for all powers, but especially
for those -20.00D or above, when a higher refractive index glass is used, the lens is 70mm diameter,
with the lenticular decentered 4mm above the centre of the blank, which has the advantage of allowing
patients to wear most large eye size fashion frames. For best visual results the monocular optical centres
should be measured both horizontally and vertically as if being fitted for a progressive. Dispensers should
use “sellotape” or a “grid locater” on the frame to ensure correct positioning of the optical centres.
Available in white 1.701, 1.801 and photobrown extra 1.601, cosmetic tints and multicoatings are also
possible.
Benefits : * Accurate vision due to precise pupil distance fittings.
* A satisfactory field of vision without distortion.
* Light weight lens.
* Allows considerably reduced edge thickness.
* Allows a wide range of frame selection.
* Cosmetically ideal.
* Psychologically acceptable to “head moving” patients.
* Closer fitting to the eye allows a perfect normal appearance.
The refractive index used and aperture size available vary according to the power required, see the chart
below for further details of availability.
White Glass and *Brown Photochromic
Note: This chart is a guide, for Rx matching purposes the actual index used may differ.Right and left eyes will generally be of the same index.
Refractive Index
1.60 - 1.70
1.60 - 1.70
1.60 - 1.70
1.60 - 1.70
1.70 - 1.80
1.80
Sphere Power
-12.00D to -13.50D
-13.75D to -15.25D
-15.50D to -17.00D
-17.25D to -19.00D
-19.25D to -23.00D
-23.25D to -48.00D
Central Aperture
Diameter (mm)
30
29
28
27
26
25 - 20
60 The Norville Rx Companion
Refractive Index
1.60
1.67
1.74
Rx Allsorts contd.
Resin Super Lenti.
The advent of new free-form manufacturing techniques has now made the availability of resin Super Lenti
possible.
SUPER LENTI
White Resin, Grey / Brown Transitions Photochromic
& *Resin Polarised
Sphere Power
-12.00D to -16.00D
-16.00D to -18.00D
-18.00D to -22.00D
Central Aperture
Diameter (mm)
40
35 - 30
30
* where available
FULL APERTURE
Actual comparison
61The Norville Rx Companion
Rx Allsorts contd.
Abbe Number.
When only crown glass was available the interest in Abbe number or V-value (59) was but academic. Today with so many new materials all with great variations of Abbe numbers interest has heightened. The higher the V-value the less chromatism perceived by the wearer.
Be aware when checking lenses on lensmeters (automatic focimeters) that, because they work on a different wavelength to that of “manual” focimeters, power discrepancies can occur that really do not exist.
The new generation of lensmeters have a facility to adjust the Abbe number, thereby allowing a truer representation of the power reading. This is of particular importance on higher index materials that generally have lower abbe numbers than standard Crown glass or resin.
Failure to appreciate this important factor may lead to unnecessary delays to your patient while you return the lens to us as incorrect, only to be told that the Rx is correct when set for the Abbe number of the material.
A point also of particular concern, is that there continues to be a failure to agree an international standard on a single reference wavelength to be used when checking lenses. The UK and USA use the Helium d line (wavelength 587.56nm) with Europe using the Mercury e line (wavelength 546.07nm). For high powered lenses the same lens could read 0.12D difference!
Fresnel Press on Prisms.
Over 170 years ago, Augustine Fresnel conceived the idea of replacing the continuous surface of a lens with a series of minute stepped zones.
Today’s high technology allows polyvinyl chloride membranes, no more than 1mm thick, to be cast from precision dies resulting in a totally flexible material. Computer technology is used to calculate the angles and spaces that make up the zones.
Can you imagine a 30 dioptre prism no more than 1mm substance? You can obtain this with a Fresnel.
Available from 1 to 30 dioptres they can be attached to the posterior surface of a conventional prescription lens, i.e. +4.00DS +1.00DC x 20 7 prism IN. A normal stock lens (with no prism) is obtainedthen a 7 dioptre Fresnel membrane would be cut to the eyeshape of the frame. Using just water adhesion the shaped Fresnel with correct prism orientation is applied to the back surface of the lens.
Fresnels can even be used on multifocals and progressives providing the addition is on the front surface (that is to say the back surface onto which the Fresnel is applied must be free from segment ridges which would prevent the membrane from adhering to the lens surface).
A Fresnel can create a form of prism controlled where it is cut so as to cover the distance or reading portion only, thus allowing different prismatic values for distance and near, something a conventional multifocal will not allow.
Many professionals often prescribe Fresnels as temporary or trial lenses to ascertain patient acceptance. Some patients may be glad to use a pair of lenses fitted with Fresnels as occasional dress wear spectacles, although there is a significant reduction in visual acuity.
Fresnel PrismConventional Prism
62 The Norville Rx Companion
Rx Allsorts contd.
E Style Bifocal and Trifocal.E style or Executive bifocals and trifocals were lately mass produced by American Optical, but their original appearance circa 1784 was attributed to Benjamin Franklin, the American inventor (though Dolland may have produced these earlier), hence the Franklin bifocal made from two single vision lenses cut in half and fitted into a spectacle frame. Benjamin Franklin travelled Europe extensively and at one time had a house in Craven Street, London. The same street coincidentally in which the College of Optometrists has its home today.
These Franklin Split lenses were, if anything, better than today’s one piece representations, as it was far easier then to control the distance and reading centres, something today we find very difficult. The heyday of the Executive in glass was a time when eyesizes were small and the substance of the finished lenses, because their diameter was small, could be kept thin - 55mm was considered large!
Today we have 78mm diameter Resin Executive lens blanks, which, when used to the full diameter, result in extremely thick finished lenses, even when you attempt to minimise the finished lens substance. Why? Because of the basic design of the E Style. This is wonderfully illustrated by Mo Jalie’s diagram (page 151 Ophthalmic Lenses and Dispensing). With an E Style, the Rx may seem a mild +0.25 sphere but combined with a +2.75 add the total power is +3.00 DS. This is the power for which we need to calculate the finished substance, not its +0.25 distance Rx.
So whenever you think of using an E Style remember Prof. Mo Jalie’s succinct words, “Look upon an E Style as a near vision lens to which is added a minus segment for distance vision”. Then you will understand its limitations. If it’s used as a lens for myopes only, or very small frames in plus Rxs, then it will look fine, otherwise it needs to be renamed the “Door Stop” lens. Remember a D seg, even if it’s a large 45 D segment, even a +4.00 add, is always surrounded by a circle of lower power “distance”, which controls and contains the finished lens substance.
Talking of control or lack of, the other problematical area of E Style is the optical centre position. Whilst it has very little vertical jump, with the distance and reading centres vertically coinciding, this is not the case with its horizontal reading centre. These are extremely difficult to position, most Rx Labs, including us, will ignore reading centre positions on E Style. To overcome this usually results in too great a reduction in the overall blank size, often with too little lens blank left to glaze correct distance centres!
LTF v ABS (Luminous Transmission Factor v Absorption).
A great problem arises from those practices who are using “continental” tint samples and forget their codes are in lens absorption and not transmission percentage, i.e. 20% ABS is a light lens whilst 20% LTF is the exact opposite, very dark.
The conventional and established UK style of ordering tints is by LTF, Luminous Transmission Factor, i.e. Norlite B80 is the LTF %, i.e. 20 % of the light is absorbed by the tint with 80% being transmitted (a light tint). If in doubt always use the codes LTF or ABS after the tint code - this will alert lab staff. International optical standards are recommending the adoption of the UK LTF system, so many will eventually need to alter from ABS tint codes.
Edge Thickness.
One of the lost wonders of dispensing optics is the ability of seemingly anyone to recall their sag formula to calculate edge thickness!
S = r - √(r2 - y2)
Additionally, it’s important we state the parameters we have set into our computer for edging allowances (at thinnest edge). Standard Rim Edge Thickness Calculation for plus power Rxs :
Plastic rimmed 1.4mm at glazed edge Metal rimmed 1.8mm at glazed edge Rimless Trilogy/Trivex 1.4mm at drill hole Supra 2.2mm at nylon Swim Goggle 2.5mm PS: We have a facility to “custom design” any edge thickness you specify; also to set varying parameters against individual account numbers for those always wishing ultra thin lenses.
63The Norville Rx Companion
Rx Allsorts contd.
Fused Photochromic.
Remember glass fused bifocals! You might recall they are made from two pieces of glass, the segment
portion needing to be of a higher index otherwise it would be single focus! All photochromic fused
bifocals and trifocals are produced using white fused buttons, so the higher the reading addition the less
coloured the reading portion. Some would claim this to be an advantage for reading!
Glazing Bevel Position.
Misunderstandings often arise over the placement of minus lens glazing bevels. It is our policy to always
machine these flush with the spectacle front plane. This ensures the best cosmetic view for anyone looking
at the spectacle wearer as there is no protrusion of bevel to the front, all is hidden to the back, although it
is of course visible to the wearer when they take their spectacles off.
Should you wish to specify an alternative position, this is possible providing you state so at the time of
ordering, e.g. 50% 50% or 30% 60% etc. The bevel cannot be changed once glazed, unless it is reglazed to
a smaller eyesize.
It cannot be stressed enough that to make any significant reduction in the bevel thickness, consider smaller
eyesizes or higher indices.
High Value Prisms.
Specified prisms over 6D can prove difficult for an Rx house for a number of reasons, mainly due to the
need to seek out sources of lens blanks that are thick enough e.g. 8D of prism will need a lens blank of at
least 8mm at its edge, even before extra is added for the Rx itself. It is not uncommon to require 12mm or
even 16mm blanks, often an impossibility in some lens types.
Sometimes an OMP may specify an Rx that, for instance, might be 12D base up in the right eye with no
prism in the left eye. This can be rewritten 6D base up right eye, 6D base down left eye, i.e. the prism has
been split.
More complex is an Rx that requires 8D prism base up and 4D base in in the right eye, this resolves to
8.94D prism base up and in along 63.4 degrees. Now what do we do if we split the prism? 4.5D prism at 45
degrees in the right eye and 4.5D prism at 135 degrees in the left eye.
High prisms will always look thick when glazed; anything reducing their specified values can only be an
advantage.
64 The Norville Rx Companion
Lens Measure
Variously called lens clocks or genevas, previously known as the latter due to their invention by the Geneva
Lens Co, Chicago, USA. Lens measures are instruments to give a reading of lens curve, when used in comparison
against a known test curve; this can indeed be a very accurate measurement. With the two ixed pins 20mm
apart and a central variable depth pin, the lens measure is a form of sagometer whose hand positioning on
the printed dial converts to dioptres. This movement records plus lens curves from lat to 17 dioptres with
a similar range for minus curves. The choice of 20mm for the pins enables segment curves of 22mm solid
bifocals to be read. Although different manufacturers adopted different pin widths, the principle being
similar this just required a re-calculated face dial. Those mostly produced in the mid 20th century were from
USA sources, calibrated in index 1.530, with others produced in the UK (to 1.523 index), France and Germany
also having their own production sources. The majority of measures today are produced in the Far East. One
recent introduction has been a joint 1.523 and 1.60 clock face.
Looked after carefully, these slightly fragile instruments can perform sterling service to the lens technician for
assessing lens curves, particularly useful when determining those of a glazed spectacle frame. Lens measures
might appear to be an instrument from, and for, yesteryear but are equally as important today. How else
will you determine if you are looking at a front or back surface design progressive? However operators need
to exercise particular care in use, by placing the lens measure steadied by fore-inger into a perpendicular
position on the lens surface, to then lift and reset at 90° for any second reading (cyl). Too often the hasty
move rotating a pressed lens measure against the lens surface will leave a trail of permanent scratches from
the pointed pins! With today’s high quality loat glass, reference to a glass top (zero), in the absence of a
known test plate, can be used to check calibration.
Rx Allsorts contd.
Geneva Optical, USA Feb 1891 Bausch & Lomb, USA 1960
Dual Index, P&W Cat 2009
65The Norville Rx Companion
Rx Allsorts contd.
General Sports Protection.
There are a number of sports goggles available, offering both protective as well as corrective applications. Polycarbonate should, in all cases, be the only material of choice. Polycarbonate can be tinted and is also available in Transitions options for outdoor sports enthusiasts helping to eliminate glare.
Squash has now got its own eye protection standard, BS7930-1, to which all squash specific protectors must be tested to.Their use is mandatory for all squash doubles and junior competitions in the U.K.
Swimming Goggles.
As the name implies, the goggles are made for swimming rather than diving, i.e. primarily above the surface. A swimming goggle is therefore used primarily for protection from pool chlorine, over-exposure to water borne bacteria, and most importantly to confirm the direction in which you are travelling, i.e. not out to sea!
As most of the usage is as a normal spectacle wearer, no change in Rx is necessary other than compensation of vertex distances.
Ready-glazed spherical power options are available off the shelf for negative spherical powers with some plus, usually in polycarbonate with anti-mist.
Full corrective powers can be supplied in either CR39 or polycarbonate; the latter tends to have better demisting properties.
Diving Goggles.
This is where the complications set in for, unlike swimming, when we have an air to lens relationship, now the consideration is water to lens, a whole new calculation! A flat face plate requires no change but a curved lens surface will require compensated powers.
Most diving goggles are now available with off the shelf corrective spherical lenses, pre-shaped and toughened, for a quick transfer option.
Where higher powers, positive or astigmatic powers are required, the Norbond process allows us to surface, shape and bond your required prescription to the flat front face plate, but please consider the effect of the change of vertex distances. Distance only and distance/reading combinations possible.
It would be helpful if, when ordering, the required positioning of segments is drawn onto the rear of the face plate.
Where a customer’s own goggle is being used the process required for Norbonding means it must be able to be dismantled.
References The Norville Sports Eyewear Catalogue offers fuller details of Rx options.
66 The Norville Rx Companion
Rx Allsorts contd.
Technology Overview.
Normal stereopsis is a consequence of the fact that our
eyes are spaced about two and a half inches apart - and so
each of them sees a slightly different view of the world In
order to create the virtual stereoscopic effect; 3D displays
also need to send a slightly different - and unique - view
to each eye, without the other eye seeing the image that
is not intended for it.
Historically, this has been achieved by projecting the two
stereo images onto a screen from the same side as the
audience (front projection), or from behind the screen
(rear projection) Both aproaches are stil in use in movie
theaters, museums, homes and classrooms, depending on
the size and requirements of the location and the audience.
More recently-and mainly, but not exclusively, for home
use - modern high-definition television sets can display the
two unique stereo images in a number of different ways,
which are then decoded and presented to the viewer as
distinct and separate left eye and right eye views.
But with all of these display technologies, how are the two
images separated for each of the eyes of each individual
member of the audience, wherever they are sitting in the
living room, the movie theater or in the classroom? This
has always been the toughest problem for 3D scientists to
solve...
Main viewing technologies have evolved, for
front projection, rear projection and modern TV 3D
presentations...
1 ANAGLYPH
The viewer wears glasses
with different-coloured
filters (usually red and blue)
placed in front of each eye.
The two stereo images - left
eye and right eye - are also
coloured red and blue.
In theory, each eye will
therefore only see the image
intended for it. Recently,
more advanced forms of
colour separation (known
as wavelength multiplex
visualization) have been
developed, with striking -
and economical - results.
2 PASSIVE (CIRCULARLY)
POLARIZED
The viewer wears glasses
with oppositely polarized
filters placed in front of each
eye. The two stereo images
are also projected through
oppositely polarized filters,
so that each eye only sees
the view intended for it. In
movie theatres the effect
is achieved by using special
screens that preserve
the polarization of each
reflected image. In the
home, image electronics
and special screen materials
produce the polarizing
effect.
3. ACTIVE SHUTTER
The viewer wears battery-
powered glasses that
receive signals from the
TV equipment, or the
projector, which instructs
them to alternately occlude
each eye in synchrony with
the alternating (left
and right eye) images
being displayed. This ‘eye
sequential shuttering’
typically occurs 120 times
a second - too fast to be
perceived. Many movie
theatres around the world
also use this technology.
4. ’GLASSES-FREE’ 3D
...also known as ‘autoste
-reoscopy.’
Currently, this technology
works best in displays
that are viewed at close
distances and in carefully
controlled environments.
It does have applications
in certain specialized
signage and entertainment
situations, but is not
yet suitable for larger
audiences.
The American 3D@home Consortium and AOA have compiled this summary in their 3D in the Classroom, See Well, Learn Well” public health report.
Norville provide Polaroid 3D circular polarised (passive) Afocal & Afocal Adults and children’s overspecs for
3D viewing in cinemas and at home. Rx Polaroid 3D lenses are not currently available.
To learn more, go to www.3deyehealth.org
67The Norville Rx Companion
Rx Ordering
“From customer to production”
Customer
UNCUT REMOTE EDGED PREPARE & ADVISE GLAZED SUPPLY & GLAZE
ElectronicOrder
Stockroom
Production
On Line Fax PostTel
Manual Rx Entry & Design
Stockroom
Production
Special Order Components
68 The Norville Rx Companion
Rx House Order Progress
“From customer to completion”
ReverseEscalation
Non EDI EDI
InvalidData
Stock FinishedLenses
Blocking
Surfacing
Verification
Supply asUncuts
TintingCoating
StockLenses
Despatch to Customer
Semi-finished(requiring
manufacture)
✕Q.A.
Check
In StockLensesPicked
GlazingDepartments
Rx Order(Lenses)
Lenses Designed
Non EDIOrder Entry
Chased Job
Valid Data
3
Customer Service Dept.
Customer
PRODUCTIONPROCESSES
Out ofStockOrder
Repair Dept.
Pre Entry - Tray Created
Order fromWarehouse
Order directfrom
External Supplier
QueryDept.
Equipment
Accessories
Off the shelfProducts
Frames
69The Norville Rx Companion
Supply S.V.
SUPPLY FRAME
FRAME TO FOLLOW
ENCLOSED FRAME
STYLE
COLOUR
EYESIZE DBL
mm
From a diameter of
Surfaced for substance
Nearest centres acceptable
mmmm
SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS
DATE REQ.PX REF:DATE SENT
NAME & ADDRESS
NASAL
DRAWN AROUND INSIDE RIMDRAWN AROUND FORMER
SEAHAMHARROGATEGLOUCESTEREDINBURGHBOLTON
GLAZED
ORDER REFERENCE
ACCOUNT NUMBER
*Indicate hole positions on rimless
UNCUT
SPHERE CYLINDER AXIS
ADD
PRISM VALUE
INDEX TINT (LTF) / COATINGLENS PRODUCT FORM & TYPE
SEG. SIZE SEG./FITPOSITION
DISTANCEO.C. POSITION
DISTANCECENTRES
Ticking off frame type provides uncuts withoptimal edge thickness when glazed
IN-LINE
SUPRA
METAL
PLASTIC
RIMLESS*
8 WRAP
FRAME TYPE
FRAME MODEL EYE (A)
DEPTH (B)
R L
STANDARD
EDGE
KNIFE
EDGE
Please tick as required
Diameter of blank required
Stock Finished Only
READINGCENTRES
TRIAL FRAME TILTSPECTACLE WRAP
FRONTBASE CURVE
COMPENSATEDRX BVD ANGLE ° READ DIST
cmmmmm
20
20
404020 20
D.B.L.
Δ BASEDIRECTION
Please tick
(3)
HEIGHT OF O.C.ABOVE SEG TOPHALF PAIR ONLY
Supply S.V.
SUPPLY FRAME
FRAME TO FOLLOW
ENCLOSED FRAME
STYLE
COLOUR
EYESIZE DBL
mm
From a diameter of
Surfaced for substance
Nearest centres acceptable
mmmm
SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS
DATE REQ.PX REF:DATE SENT
NAME & ADDRESS
NASAL
DRAWN AROUND INSIDE RIMDRAWN AROUND FORMER
SEAHAMHARROGATEGLOUCESTEREDINBURGHBOLTON
GLAZED
ORDER REFERENCE
ACCOUNT NUMBER
*Indicate hole positions on rimless
UNCUT
SPHERE CYLINDER AXIS
ADD
PRISM VALUE
INDEX TINT (LTF) / COATINGLENS PRODUCT FORM & TYPE
SEG. SIZE SEG./FITPOSITION
DISTANCEO.C. POSITION
DISTANCECENTRES
Ticking off frame type provides uncuts withoptimal edge thickness when glazed
IN-LINE
SUPRA
METAL
PLASTIC
RIMLESS*
8 WRAP
FRAME TYPE
FRAME MODEL EYE (A)
DEPTH (B)
R L
STANDARD
EDGE
KNIFE
EDGE
Please tick as required
Diameter of blank required
Stock Finished Only
READINGCENTRES
TRIAL FRAME TILTSPECTACLE WRAP
FRONTBASE CURVE
COMPENSATEDRX BVD ANGLE ° READ DIST
cmmmmm
20
20
404020 20
D.B.L.
Δ BASEDIRECTION
Please tick
(3)
HEIGHT OF O.C.ABOVE SEG TOPHALF PAIR ONLY
Rx Allsorts contd.
Rx Order FormOur new pre-printed order form does not show an account number, practice address or an order number, these details are left for our customers to fill in.
An account number, practice name and town is required on all orders to ensure, when completed, it is sent and charged to the correct location.
With regard to order numbers and patient reference, this is left to your practice to decide how we log your orders. If you require us to use an order number, please specify in the space provided 1 .If, however, you wish to use your patient reference, do not show an order number and we will automatically default to the patient reference 2 when no order number is shown.
1 2
We show two examples above:Example A: We will log by the order number
Example B: We will log by the patient reference
1
2
A B
70 The Norville Rx Companion
HELPING US TO HELP YOU
The following list has been obtained from the Federation of Manufacturing Opticians and represents the most common reasons why orders received by prescription houses have to be queried.
A queried order is a delayed order* Rx needs confirming: It helps if you confirm for example that the Rt sphere is say +3.00DS and Lt -3.00DS, just “highlighting” is sufficient to alert us to the fact you did notice. .....................................................................................................................................................................
* Poor writing/can’t read requirements, especially numbers......................................................................................................................................................................
* No optical centres stated......................................................................................................................................................................
* No segment height stated......................................................................................................................................................................
* No OC height on uncut half pair orders: Without this you run the risk of creating prism imbalance......................................................................................................................................................................
* No indication on uncut half pair progressive order if the “other” lens is prism thinned: Without this you run the risk of creating prism imbalance......................................................................................................................................................................
* No seg size stated......................................................................................................................................................................
* Lenses will not cut out, too great a decentration with too extreme an eyesize......................................................................................................................................................................
* No addition stated......................................................................................................................................................................
* No lens material stated......................................................................................................................................................................
* No blank size stated (Uncuts)......................................................................................................................................................................
* Rx out of listed range......................................................................................................................................................................
* No DBL: We need this on uncut orders when designing to the eyeshape, to calculate the blanks size and minimum substance required. .....................................................................................................................................................................
* No eyeshape supplied on uncut orders: To design the minimum blank size and thinnest substance lenses we need this information, along with full setting details...........................................................................................................................................................................
* No colour on photochromic lenses: Please remember to specify the colour on Sunsensor and Transitions materials...........................................................................................................................................................................
* Missing information: Please check you have supplied your account number and an order number or reference.
Queries on Rx Orders
71The Norville Rx Companion
Optical Heritage
History isn’t heritage – that school experience of history rote of some long distance past events isn’t the
same as a group of technicians recalling those inherited experiences remembering “how we used to do it” of
production methods and machines used.
Craft skills change with each generation; our optical forbears gave great service. Soon Poker arm, 122,
Radmaster, hanging spindle, pitch pot, shanking pliers, melton cloth, red rouge even 524 and 722 will be
history but just now, albeit for a dwindling few, they are heritage. (See below for photo quiz!)
The College of Optometrists maintains the British Optical Association Museum at their London headquarters
(Curator Neil Handley). Mainly spectacle frames and eye testing equipment. Unfortunately their space is very
limited so they are unable to store much in the way of optical production equipment. There is some in the
reserve store of the London Science Museum and Norville hold a few items in our Gloucester Display. Very
little else of optical production machinery has been preserved. Members of the Optical Antiques International
Collectors Club do their best to keep on track.
www.college-optometrists.org/museum
www.oaicc.com
1.
2.
3.
4. 5.
1. Poker Arm2. 122 Hand Generator3. Radmaster4. Hanging Spindle5. UKO Newit 524
72 The Norville Rx Companion
Rx House - Change afoot?
The laboratory is a manufacturerand has always been a manufacturer. Laboratories have always made spectacles to individual prescriptions for the dispenser to dispense to theconsumer. Has the time finally come when the laboratory will replace the mass manufacturer in the traditional value chain and become the principal manufacturer?
Will the laboratory take the place of the traditional mass manufacturer that works with the raw materials from a supplier and turns them into lenses? The traditional lens manufacturer is already being replaced in the value chain by the laboratory.
Ultimately there will be one less step between the raw material supplier and the dispenser. That does not mean the lens manufacturers, Essilor, Zeiss, Hoya and the rest will disappear; but the laboratory will take over many of their traditional functions.
Mass lens manufacturing history
Early in the 1900s in Germany, in a small town outside of Berlin, lenses were mass-produced for the first time to finished prescription powers. These were single vision glass lenses that were produced in spheres and cylinders, and compound lenses. These factory-manufactured lenses were able to satisfy the needs of a large part of the spectacle-wearing public, those that could afford prescription glasses.
The lenses were produced in increments of quarter, half, or whole dioptre steps. However, people’s eyes were tested and they were fitted with lenses that were not to their precise correction. Their lenses were either a little strong or a little weak.
Meanwhile the laboratory that hadbeen making lenses complete from raw materials, one at a time, continued to make lenses. As mass produced lenses became more and more available, laboratories stopped making prescription lenses from raw materials and were able to buy mass produced semi-finished lenses. In single vision prescriptions these lenses were in the form of semi-finished spheres and semi-finished cylinders.
Multifocal lenses, by their nature,were always available only in semi-finished spheres. In all cases the laboratory always ground the concave side of lenses and mass-produced lenses were always finished on the convex side. The laboratories forgot how, or did not want to, grind a prescription on both sides of a lens, a difficult and time consuming process.
In the 1960s and 1970s there was achange. The single vision lenses mass production manufacturers switched from producing plus cylinder lenses to minus cylinders. After 50 or more years of putting the cylinder on the convex side of the lens it was decided that the concave side, or minus side, was optically better.
What has changed
Multifocal lenses, except for certain types, always required finishing and placing the cylinder on the concave side.
The result of this change was that laboratories only required semi-finished spheres and only ground the concave side of the lens. Laboratories purchased their semi-finished lenses from the mass production lens manufacturers.
In recent years, the laboratory haschanged significantly. Advances in the technology of grinding and polishing machines have been a major agent for change. The computer has taken over almost complete operation of thelaboratory from the input of prescriptions through the control of the grinding process, even the inspection, marking, and packaging of the finished Rx.
Technology changes started at the end of World War II. The diamond lens generator to make cylindrical lenses entered the laboratory. A US sailor, while serving during the War, conceived the idea for the generator. In Europe, laboratories were restarting fresh with new equipment and needed generators. In a short time, European machinery makers emerged and moved laboratory technology forward.
73The Norville Rx Companion
Organic lenses
Organic lenses were also a big change for the laboratory. Organic lenses were a new lens material with a new index of refraction for them to grind. In addition, Essilor developed a new multifocal lens, the progressive lens. Progressive lenses made a major change in the industry as a whole and particularly in the lab.
The advances in manufacture and design of progressive lenses are paralleled by the technology that has advanced in the laboratory. Progressive lenses made the laboratory one of the keys to profitability in the lens business. New equipment and technology in the laboratory for A/R and hard coating are another important change that enhances the laboratory’s ability to be a manufacturer.
However, perhaps the biggest change for the laboratory is thecomputer software driven generators and polishers that can produce any aspheric or progressive lens on either side of a lens blank, generators that are able to manufacture both sides of a lens from a puck of raw material. The laboratory no longer needs semi-finished lenses to make prescriptions.
Individualised and digital free-formlenses are the future for the laboratory. These lenses are now available from the laboratory thathas the latest equipment and technology. The industry is promoting the use of new measuring and refracting equipment to individualise prescriptions to a precise power. It is not possible to use mass manufactured semi-finished lenses to grind individualised prescriptions.
The lens manufactureras the laboratory
Mass manufacturers of lenses always had laboratories, but they were usually a part of the factories themselves and only for experimenting or testing newproducts and making prescriptions for their own employees. In the US the lens manufacturers American Optical and Bausch & Lomb each had hundreds of branches throughout the country.
As time went on regional branches (laboratories) were either illegal, as in the US, or not practical and possible. Essilor, Zeiss (Sola), Hoya and others, in order to have distribution for their products, made exclusive agreements with laboratories. They soon decided, however, that country-by-country or geographic area by geographic area they would either start laboratories or buy and own existing laboratories to guarantee distribution.
Today the acquisition of laboratories by the mass lens makers may be understood as a look into the future. With the technology available to make finished prescription lenses complete from a glob of raw material will they have lost their raison d’être? Is that the future?
Will the traditional lens manufacturer and the modern laboratory swap places (with the laboratory being the lens manufacturer)? Perhaps not quiteyet. Is there a new opportunity for the independent laboratory with enough economic backing to make its own way in the marketplace? The independent laboratory will have to compete with its own progressive lens design and its own coatings. The necessary ingredients for that to happen are already available.
The future
In any case the value chain in the optical business will have one less step as the manufacturing level and the laboratory level merge or amalgamate into one. The value chain will start with the raw material supplier and go directly to the manufacturer / laboratoryand then onto the optical dispenser and to the consumer.
No matter what the trend, one thing is clear; that however glasses are dispensed, on line or traditionally, the laboratory will remain as an essential element in the optical world.
Reprinted courtesy ofOptical World
Written byDick Chaffin
Webster Lens, USA.
Rx House - Change afoot?
74 The Norville Rx Companion
Remote Edging
A FAR EDGE
How the system works.......
• Via the “A FAR EDGE” process you input your lens requirements and trace frame.
• Once we receive the data it will move straight into production
• Lenses are selected (surfaced and coated if required)
• Edged to the supplied trace, passed through to quality control and dispatched to you for assembly
• As the order is sent to us electronically we are guaranteed to receive your order and account information
• What you order is what we supply
What will I need?
A computer running Window 2000, Windows XP, Windows Vista or
Windows 7 that has an internet connection. Basic workshop equipment
such as screwdrivers. Adjustment pliers. Frame heater. Screws. A hand
edger could be an optional addition.
Norville will supply you with a frame tracer and all the necessary in-
house training for the staff using the system
What do I do?
1) Log on to “NOR-EDI” (Screen shots will accompany the detailed document)
Enter job details
• Job Reference
• Prescription details
• Tints colours, coatings
• Frame details
• Bevel/Grooved/Drilled - position, width/depth, diameter Polished
• Special Requirements
2) Set up frame and trace or order uncut complete job
Very Important Using a set up frame is essential as it will give additional accuracy of lenses
3) Send EDI order to Norville
4) On return of the edged lenses it to the frame
Training and Back up • Introduction to Norville Optical Group products and services
• On site training for all aspects of the software system
• One to one introduction to the tracer and its operations
• Demonstration of unsuitable frames
• In practice training of lens itting and frame setting up
• Norville are only a phone call away for any issues you might have
- we have a group of experts to deal with your requirements
75The Norville Rx Companion
Remote Edging
FAQs
CostThe cost for the lenses will be: the uncut cost less
discount plus the remote edge charge (nett) plus
P&P and VAT.
Are there any lens exclusions?Glass and safety Rx as cut lenses cannot be supplied.
Other orders dependent on the prescription.
Are there any frame exclusions?Inline metal design.
Can I order uncut?Yes, any uncut in the Norville catalogue can be
ordered through the EDI system.
Can I order frames?Yes, via Norville web site link.
Can I order complete Frame Lens packages?Yes.
How do I chase a job?When you place the order the system will give you
an expected delivery date, in the event you need
to chase you can check the progress on the daily
report.
Can I order just one lens?Yes single lenses or pairs can be ordered.
Do I have to calibrate the tracer even if I haven’t used it for a while?Yes, the tracer/system will require a daily size check
prior to sending the irst order of the day, and then
a tracer size check every 200 traces. This ensures we
know the exact size the frame is and ultimately the
accuracy of the edged lenses you receive, this
should be done after the tracer has been allowed ½
an hour to warm up.
Can we use our existing tracer?Most tracers are compatible with our system.
Can I order rimless?Superlite, Microlite, Lindberg and Silhouette shape
just provide us with the shape number and eye size.
Can I order Norville Eyewear frame shapes?Yes, just as rimless quote frame style and size (you
don’t have to trace again)
What guarantees?EDI lenses are CE marked and provided in
accordance to the relevant BS -ISO Standard.
Returns and queriesNorville will work with you and your staff to resolve
any issues.
What are the maintenance/ call out charge in the event of tracer failure?See Norville supply agreement.
Do I need to be registered with the MRHA (The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency)?If you are not already registered you need to
register as an assembler with the MRHA.
Because of the speed these lenses go though our system, any changes to the order may not be possible.
76 The Norville Rx Companion
Quality Assurance
Norville Optical was one of the earliest companies in the Rx optical field to obtain in 1986 the prestigious
BS5750 Certification (now referred to as ISO 9000).
We are licensed to manufacture safety eyewear under the BS EN 166 Scheme (formally BS 2092), from our
Bolton laboratory.
CE marking means that a manufacturer claims his product satisfies the requirements essential for it to be
considered safe and fit for its intended purpose. It also means that the product can be marketed anywhere
in the Community without further controls.
With regard to CE marking, we have two Directives to consider, the Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
and Medical Devices (MD).
Taking PPE first, we can dispel a popular myth - the CE mark replaces the Kitemark - IT DOES NOT! One
cannot replace the other but they can co-exist. The CE mark is a legal requirement, the Kitemark is a
quality mark. Since the first of July 1995, it has been a requirement that the CE mark be displayed on
safety eyewear. Norville will, however, continue using the Kitemark as it represents a more rigorous
scheme than the CE mark. Once awarded, CE marking does not have to be independently verified, whilst
Kitemark gives independent third party assurance of continuing product conformity through audits,
factory surveillance and test records.
Now to the Medical Devices Directive. A medical device can be described as any instrument, apparatus,
appliance, material or article, whether used alone or in combination, including the software necessary
for its proper application, intended by the manufacturer to be used for human beings for the purpose of
diagnosis, prevention, monitoring, treatment or alleviation of disease.
The Medical Devices regulations came into effect on 14th June 1998.
The directive states that all spectacle frames sent for glazing should carry the CE label on the frame
itself. Frames should be checked for compatibility with the lens type being prescribed. In conclusion,
with the components that go towards making a pair of spectacles now having to be CE marked, we at
Norville, thanks to our systems and controls that we have already developed are able to comply with these
regulations, thereby enabling you to do likewise.
Our MDA registration number is CA000295.
77The Norville Rx Companion
Optical StandardsSPECTACLE LENSES CH/172/3BS/EN/ISO 10322-1:2006 Semi-Finished Lens Blanks - S.V. and Multifocal Under Review BS/EN/ISO 10322-2:2006 Semi-Finished Lens Blanks - Progressive Lenses Under Review BS/EN/ISO 8980-1:2004 Uncut S.V. and Multifocal Lenses Due for review 2013 BS/EN/ISO 8980-2:2004 Uncut Progressive Lenses Due for review 2013 BS/EN/ISO 8980-3:2004 Transmittance Speciications and Test Methods Under Review by ISO/TC/172/SC7/WG3 BS/EN/ISO 8980-4:2006 Speciication and Test Methods for Anti-Relective Coatings BS/EN/ISO 8980-5:2005 Minimum Requirements for Abrasion Resistance BS/EN/ISO 13666:1999 Spectacle Lenses - Vocabulary Under Review by TC172/SC7/WG3 BS/EN/ISO 14889:2009 Fundamental requirements for Uncut Finished Lenses Under Review by SC7/WG3 BS/EN/ISO 8598:1998 Focimeters Under Review by TC172/SC7/WG10 BS/EN/ISO 9342-2:2005 Test Lenses to calibrate focimeters BS/EN/ISO 8429:1997 Graduated dial scale BS/EN 14139:2010 Ophthalmic optics - Speciications for ready-to-wear spectacles. BS EN ISO 21987:2009 Ophthalmic optics - Mounted spectacle lenses BS 7394-2:2007 Speciication for Prescription Spectacles At BSI for Publication BS 2738-3:2004+A1:2008 Speciication for Presentation of Prescriptions and Prescription orders
EYE PROTECTION FOR LEISURE ACTIVITIES BS 7930-1:1998 Eye protectors for racket sports - Squash ISO/TR 28980:2007 Spectacle lenses. Parameters affecting lens power measurement
FRAME STANDARDS The following are the list of all the spectacle frame standards.ISO/TS 24373 on nickel release is irrelevant in Europe, since EN 1811 and 12472 take precedence.
BS EN 16128:2011 Reference test method for release of nickel from those parts of spectacle frames and sunglasses intended to come into close and prolonged contact with the skin BS EN ISO 7998:2005 Ophthalmic Optics - Spectacle frames - lists of equivalent terms and vocabulary BS EN ISO 8624: 2011(replaces 2002) Ophthalmic Optics - Spectacle frames - measuring system and terminology BS EN ISO 11380: 1997 Optics and Optical Instruments - Ophthalmic Optics - Formers BS EN ISO 11381:1997 Optics and Optical Instruments - Ophthalmic Optics - Screw threads BS EN 12472:2005 + A1:2009 Method for simulation of wear and corrosion for the detection of nickel release from coated items. BS EN ISO 12870: 2009 Ophthalmic Optics - Spectacle Frames - Requirements and test methods. Under Review
S.C. PH2/1 STANDARDS RELATED TO SUNGLASSES
BS EN 1836:2005 Personal Eye Protection - Sunglasses and sunglare ilters for general use and ilters for direct observation of the sun BS EN 166:2002 Personal Eye Protection - Speciications Also for SC/PH 2/2 BS EN 167:2002 Personal Eye Protection - Optical test methods Also for SC/PH 2/2 BS EN 168:2002 Personal Eye Protection - Non optical methods Also for SC/PH 2/2 BS EN 12472:2005 + A1:2009 Simulation of wear and corrosion (pre-wear test for nickel release) Currently under amendment CEN/TC347/N060 BS EN 16128:2011 Reference test method for release of nickel from those parts of spectacle frames and sunglasses intended to come into close and prolonged contact with the skinBS EN 71-3:1995 Safety of toys - Migration of certain elements (to ensure no leaching of heavy metals - lead, cadmium, mercury, antimony, chromium, barium, selenium and arsenic - from paints or pigments used on children’s sunglasses). BS EN 1122:2001 Cadmium in plastics (Directive 91/338/EC prohibits use of cadmium in certain plastics).
OTHER RELATED STANDARDS BS EN 174:2001 Ski goggles for downhill skiing AS 1067 Sunglasses and fashion spectacle (Australian / New Zealand standard) ANSI Z80.3 Non-prescription sunglasses and fashion eyewear - Requirements (American Standard).
OTHER STANDARDS BS EN ISO 9001:2008 Quality Management System Requirements BS EN 170:2002 Personal eye-protection - Ultraviolet ilters Transmittance requirements and recommended use.
OPTICAL COATINGSBS ISO 9211-1:2010BS ISO 9211-1:2010 Optics and Photonics: Optical Coatings: Deinitions BS ISO 9211-3:2008BS ISO 9211-3:2008 Optics and Photonics: Optical Coatings: Environmental Durability BS ISO 9211-2:2010BS ISO 9211-2:2010 Optics and Photonics: Optical Coatings: Optical Properties BS ISO 9211-4:2006BS ISO 9211-4:2006 Optics and Photonics: Optical Coatings: Speciic Test methods LIST UPDATED 4 January 2012
Federation of Manufacturing Opticians
78 The Norville Rx Companion
Protective Eyewear
It is a requirement of the current Health and Safety Regulations that companies must provide employees in certain occupations with eye protectors.
Large companies normally purchase these afocal eye protectors together with other protective equipment from specialist suppliers. If prescription protective spectacles are required, these specialist suppliers sub-contract the work to an optical prescription manufacturer, in most cases.
Arrangements vary from one protective supplier to another, but the usual procedure is for the manufacturing company to send employees requiring protective spectacles to an optician. The opticians will provide an examination and dispense the spectacles, charging a fee for this service to the protective spectacle supplier.
It is important that the instructions given by the protective eyewear company on the order are followed to avoid queries and delays in payment of fees.
Smaller companies may not already have a specific arrangement for product type and will seek advice from their local optician. Indeed, more practices are offering both their services and complete spectacle supply options direct to industry.
Key Points
1. Standards to be aware of include : BS EN166 Personal Eye Protection Specification, which is the European standard for protective eyewear. BS7930 - 1 Squash Standard is now in force within the UK. Sports eyewear must meet this requirement if used for squash. BS7028 (1999) A useful guide for selection, use and maintenance of eye protectors.
2. CE Mark became mandatory on all protective products under the PPE Directive as of July 1995.
3. The KITEMARK on protective spectacles indicates that the manufacturer is licensed and assessed on a regular basis by an independent test authority i.e. British Standards Institute, who audit the manufacturing system to confirm compliance with relevant British/EU standard.
4. Be aware that protective spectacles are looked upon as a complete unit, frame and lenses together, and therefore both frames and lenses must be marked with the relevant standard, class of protection and manufacturing mark to give traceability. The CE mark should appear somewhere on the product.
5. Ensure that the Safety/Occupational health department on issuing an order for protective eyewear spectacles states the lens material to be used; this dictates the grade of impact resistance and therefore is very important. If an order is received at the practice with no indication of lens material or grade of protection, the employee should be referred back to the safety/occupational health department for further information.
6. A British standard is now available for guidance, it is BS7028 (1999), ‘A Guide to Selection, Use and Maintenance of Protective Eyewear for Industrial Use’, and can be purchased from British Standards Tel : 0208 996 9001 Fax : 0208 996 7001 Website : www.bsi.org.uk
References Full product information is available from the Norville Protective Eyewear catalogue.
SUBSTANCE COMPARISON CHARTFOR NEGATIVE RX AT VARIOUS POWERS IN RESIN
Shaded blocks represent a cross section to visualise cosmetic appearance of edge thicknesses4mm 6mm 8mm 10mm 12mm 14mm 16mm
Figures represent an approximation of the average edge substance and take no account of glazing, chamfering, or lens form.** This does not include Seiko products which are manufactured using Thin Centre Substance Technology and will therefore be thinner than figures in this column.
Figures were calculated using front curves as follows : Up to -6.00 DS, +4.00 sph curve, -6.50 to -9.00 DS, +2.00 sph curve, -10.00 to -12.00 DS, Flat form, where available.
A1
EDGE SUBSTANCE
6.0 6.8 7.8 8.8 10.0 6.6 7.5 8.6 9.8 11.2 7.2 8.2 9.5 10.9 12.5 7.8 9.0 10.4 12.0 13.9 8.4 9.8 11.4 13.2 15.5 8.4 9.7 11.1 12.7 14.5 9.0 10.4 12.0 13.8 15.9 10.2 11.9 13.9 16.2 11.6 13.6 16.1 19.0 12.1 14.1 16.4 13.4 15.6 14.8
Resin 1.60**CT 1.8mm
3.7 4.1 4.6 5.1 4.1 4.6 5.1 5.7 4.4 4.9 5.6 6.2 4.7 5.4 6.1 6.8 5.0 5.7 6.5 7.3 5.5 6.3 7.1 7.8 5.8 6.7 7.6 8.3 6.5 7.5 8.6 9.5 7.2 8.4 9.7 10.8 8.0 9.3 10.8 8.8 10.3 11.9 9.6 11.3 13.2
Resin 1.67CT 1.0mm
70MM
60MM
65MM
75MM
Resin 1.74CT 1.0mm
-4.00 -4.50 -5.00 -5.50 -6.00 -6.50 -7.00 -8.00 -9.00-10.00-11.00-12.00
Power In HighestMeridian
CR39 1.498CT 2.0mm
70MM
60MM
65MM
72MM
70MM
60MM
65MM
75MM
3.2 3.7 4.0 4.5 3.5 3.9 4.5 5.1 3.8 4.4 4.8 5.4 4.1 4.7 5.3 6.1 4.4 5.2 5.6 6.3 4.7 5.4 6.2 7.3 5.1 5.9 6.6 5.7 6.7 7.5 6.5 7.5 8.6 7.2 8.4 9.6 8.0 9.3 8.8 10.2
70MM
60MM
65MM
75MM
80MM
5.0 5.6 6.3 7.1 5.5 6.2 6.9 7.8 5.9 6.7 7.6 8.6 6.3 7.2 8.2 9.4 6.8 7.8 8.9 10.2 7.0 8.0 9.0 10.2 7.4 8.5 9.7 11.0 8.3 9.6 11.0 12.6 9.3 10.8 12.5 14.4 9.8 11.4 13.1 15.0 10.8 12.5 14.5 11.8 13.8 16.1
SUBSTANCE COMPARISON CHARTFOR POSITIVE RX AT VARIOUS POWERS IN RESIN
Figures represent an approximation of the average centre substance calculated at the stated blank diameter with a knife edge (0.5mm) subatance.Lenses with Aspheric surfaces have not been included in the calculations, but any Aspheric lens in a given index will be thinner than figures shown.
All lenses produced on standard front surface curves for that power.
A2
CENTRE SUBSTANCE
4.6 5.3 6.1 7.0 7.9 5.0 5.8 6.6 7.7 8.6 5.6 6.5 7.3 8.8 9.3 6.0 7.1 8.2 9.6 10.0 6.4 7.5 8.8 10.2 10.8 6.9 8.0 9.4 10.9 7.5 8.5 9.9 11.5 8.3 9.5 10.9 12.7 9.1 10.4 12.1 10.4 11.7 13.1 11.2 12.8 14.9 11.9
Resin 1.60**CT 1.8mm
3.4 3.8 4.2 4.3 3.7 4.2 4.6 4.8 4.1 4.5 5.0 5.2 4.4 4.9 5.4 5.7 4.7 5.2 5.9 6.1 4.9 5.5 6.9 7.2 5.2 5.8 7.3 7.7 5.8 6.6 6.5 7.3 7.1 8.0 7.6 8.7 9.0
Resin 1.67CT 1.0mm
70MM
60MM
65MM
75MM
Resin 1.74CT 1.0mm
+4.00 +4.50 +5.00 +5.50 +6.00 +6.50 +7.00 +8.00 +9.00+10.00+11.00+12.00
Power In HighestMeridian
CR39 1.498CT 2.0mm
70MM
60MM
65MM
72MM
70MM
60MM
65MM
75MM
3.3 3.6 3.6 3.9 3.9 4.3 4.2 4.6 4.5 5.1 4.4 5.1 4.6 5.4 5.2 6.1 5.8
70MM
60MM
65MM
75MM
80MM
4.0 4.6 5.3 5.8 4.4 5.0 5.8 6.3 4.7 5.5 6.3 6.8 5.1 5.9 6.8 7.4 5.4 6.3 7.2 8.0 5.8 6.7 7.7 8.6 6.1 7.1 8.1 9.1 6.8 7.9 9.0 7.5 8.6 10.1 8.1 9.5 10.9 8.8 10.3 11.8
GLASS SUBSTANCE - PLUS POWERSFOR DIFFERENT INDEX MATERIALS AT VARIOUS DIAMETERS
4mm 12mm10mm8mm6mm
11mm7mm 9mm5mm
These figures represent an approximation of the average centre substance calculated at the stated blank diameter with a knife edge (0.5mm) substance. Lenses with Aspheric surfaces have not been included in the calculations, but any Aspheric lens in a given index will be thinner than figures shown.
All lenses produced on standard front surface curves for that power.
Shaded blocks represent a cross section to visualise cosmetic appearance of edge thicknesses
Glass 1.70CT 1.3mm
Glass 1.90CT 1.3mm
Glass 1.80CT 1.3mm
Glass 1.60CT 1.3mm
70MM
60MM
65MM
70MM
65MM
60MM
60MM
65MM
70MM
60MM
65MM
3.7
4.0
4.3
4.6
4.9
5.2
5.6
6.2
6.7
7.4
Power In Highest
Meridian
+4.00
+4.50
+5.00
+5.50
+6.00
+6.50
+7.00
+8.00
+9.00
+10.00
+11.00
+12.00
65MM
60MM
70MM
75MM
80MM
Glass 1.523CT 1.3mm
-4.00
-4.50
-5.00
-5.50
-6.00
-6.50
-7.00
-8.00
-9.00
-10.00
-11.00
-12.00
Glass 1.523 Glass 1.60 Glass 1.70 Glass 1.8
EDGE SUBSTANCE CENTRE SUBSTANCE
Power In Highest
Meridian 70MM
60MM
65MM
70MM
65MM
60MM
65MM
60MM
70MM
75MM
80MM
65MM
60MM
3.5
3.8
4.1
4.4
4.7
5.0
5.5
6.1
6.6
7.0
7.7
8.3
4.0
4.4
4.7
5.1
5.5
5.8
6.4
7.1
7.8
8.1
8.8
9.5
4.5
5.0
5.4
5.8
6.2
6.6
7.4
8.2
9.0
9.3
10.2
11.1
3.2
3.5
3.7
4.0
4.3
4.5
4.8
5.3
5.7
6.3
4.4
4.8
5.2
5.7
6.1
6.5
6.9
7.9
8.7
9.5
10.2
10.9
5.0
5.5
6.0
6.5
7.1
7.6
8.1
9.0
9.9
10.7
5.8
6.3
6.8
7.4
8.0
8.5
9.1
10.6
6.5
7.2
7.9
5.0
5.4
6.1
6.5
7.1
4.4
4.8
5.3
5.8
6.2
6.5
7.3
8.0
8.9
3.8
4.3
4.7
5.0
5.3
5.7
6.2
6.9
7.6
7.2 3.3
3.6
3.8
4.1
4.4
4.6
4.9
5.4
6.0
6.5
7.1
7.7
3.7
4.0
4.3
4.6
4.9
5.2
5.5
6.2
6.8
7.5
8.2
8.9
3.6
3.9
4.2
4.5
4.8
5.1
5.4
6.0
6.6
7.1
7.8
8.4
4.0
4.3
4.7
5.0
5.4
5.8
6.1
6.9
7.6
8.2
9.0
9.8
4.4
4.8
5.3
5.7
6.1
6.6
6.9
7.8
8.7
9.7
10.7
11.7
4.0
4.4
4.7
5.1
5.5
5.7
6.0
6.8
7.5
8.1
8.8
9.6
4.5
4.9
5.4
5.8
6.3
6.5
6.9
7.8
8.7
9.3
10.2
11.1
5.1
5.6
6.1
6.6
7.1
7.4
7.9
8.9
10.0
10.7
11.8
13.0
4.5
5.0
5.4
5.8
6.3
6.5
6.9
7.8
8.8
9.3
10.3
11.3
5.1
5.7
6.2
6.7
7.3
7.5
8.0
9.1
10.3
10.9
12.0
13.3
5.8
6.4
7.1
7.7
8.4
8.5
9.2
10.5
12.0
12.6
14.0
15.6
6.7
7.5
8.3
9.1
10.0
9.9
10.7
12.4
14.3
7.6
8.6
9.5
10.6
11.7
8.7
9.8
11.0
12.3
13.6
5.1
5.6
6.2
6.7
7.3
7.4
7.9
9.0
10.2
10.8
12.0
13.3
5.8
6.5
7.1
7.8
8.5
8.6
9.2
10.6
12.1
12.6
A3
82 The Norville Rx Companion
Part III
DISPENSING UPDATE
FOR TWO FOCUS
& MULTI FOCUS
OPHTHALMIC LENSES
83The Norville Rx Companion
The Versatile Reading Lens
Also known as an Enhanced Reading Lens or Ofice Lens.
Features.In CR39 & Polycarbonate this lens comes in 4 degressions. That is to say it weakens off from the full reading power.
The 4 degressions are -0.75, -1.25, -1.75 & -2.25.In 1.6 plastic it comes in -1.00 & -1.50.The full reading comes in at 12mm below the itting point, therefore requiring a minimum itting height of 16mm. The full degression comes in at 8mm above the itting point requiring a minimum from top rim theoretically of 13mm, however 10mm is suficient.
Unlike a conventional progressive lens the itting height is not critical, therefore the heights can be manipulated to get the best combination of reading and intermediate.
How to select the correct lens.The general rule is to select the nearest degression which is 0.50 weaker than the reading add. This means if you have an add of +1.75 or +2.00 the degression of -1.25 would be selected. This will vary according to the task in hand. Someone working at a workstation all day such as you would ind in a call centre would need less degression than a PA who has much more varied tasks to perform.
Effectively you have two lenses in one here, depending on the add.
Again let’s take the example of a +1.75 add. If we select the -0.75 degression, the maximum clear distance vision that will be achieved is 1m away. This is good for someone who has a static task such as data input but not so good for someone who has more dynamic tasks to perform, such as a librarian, where the -1.25 degression would be better as this will give a maximum of 2.00m clear distance vision, which is suficient to walk around a library.
1. A near inter lens.2. An indoor progressive giving distance vision of 2.00m away.
The best way to select the correct lens is to use the Versatile demonstration set available from Norville.
Beneits to wearers are:• More comfortable range of vision Especially for the elderly who have lost their accommodation and the early presbyopes do not like their distance vision being blurred• Lenses more suited to the modern visual requirements• Corrects posture for computer users. (standard reading specs you lean forwards to get the screen into focus & progressive lenses the head is tilted back to get the intermediate.)• Reduces visual fatigue when using a computer. These lenses bring the resting point of accommodation onto the screen, therefore there is no lag of accommodation and visual fatigue is reduced.• Virtually distortion free near and intermediate vision • A near vision environment designed for the whole working environment rather than just a reading lens.• These lenses are for ALL PRESBYOPIC patients not just for computer users.
FittingThese lenses are itted in the same way as a conventional PPL lens with a minimum itting height of 16mm and minimum of 13mm (10mm will do). Distance centres are required as these lenses have an inset.
84 The Norville Rx CompanionThe Norville Rx Companion
The Fitting Guide to Enhanced Reading Lenses (Degressives)
This article has been kindly provided by Peter Sanders who must be considered one of the leading UK experts on degressives dispensing or, his term “enhanced reading lenses”. A lens form surprisingly some optical practices have yet even to dispense!
Peter recommends that all dispensing personnel read the following article to obtain a better understanding of these lenses before the public start coming in with the article asking to use a pair!
A patient comes out of the consulting room and the optometrist has said that the patient requires a new pair of reading spectacles. The Rx is R+1.75/-0.25x180 L+1.50. The patient has already chosen a frame, you then cost it up as frame + S/V stock lenses patient goes away with their new reading spectacles, end of story. This is a familiar pattern going on every day up and down the country; the lenses may vary inasmuch as they may be a surfaced lens and may have a coating added.As far as this goes there is nothing wrong with it as we have been supplying the same kind of product for the past 100 years. The materials may have changed but the basic concept hasn’t.So, why are we still supplying the same product now as our predecessors were all those years ago?Are our visual demands the same then as they are now? The answer to this is NO.What can we do about it?Some of you are supplying PAL lenses but this is a distance lens with a reading facility.The real answer is an enhanced reading lens.What is an enhanced reading lens?It is a lens that is based on a varifocal inasmuch as the power changes without any visible line on the lens. At the bottom of the lens you have the full reading power and the lens weakens off to give the wearer a more comfortable intermediate vision. THIS IS NOT DESIGNED PURELY FOR VDU USE. Although these lenses were originally designed with computer use in mind the uses go much further.
Let’s take 3 scenarios of the prescription mentioned earlier.
1) The managing director of a large organisation who claims not to use a computer and leaves computer use to the other employees. In actual fact he does frequently look over the shoulder of his secretary to get information from the screen. (He also sends & receives Emails but that’s not using a computer in his mind). Although he does not admit to using a computer the intermediate vision will give him much more comfortable vision at his desk. Papers on the far side of his desk will be in focus as well as the papers close to him. With the correct enhanced reading lens he should get comfortable vision up to 2 metres away and so when someone enters his office they will be in focus, therefore eliminating the need to remove his spectacles when not reading. This also has the added bonus of not putting his spectacles down and inadvertently covering them with a document only to spend time later looking for them.
2) His PA who does all the computer input as well as making all his appointments and generally keeping him organised. This job would probably involve frequent trips into his office. A conventional varifocal would not give her comfortable vision as the reading area is too limited, the intermediate too small and the distance vision not really required, an appropriate enhanced reading lens would fit the bill nicely.
3) The managing director’s wife plays the piano, sings in a choir and goes to art galleries. A different type of enhanced reading lens from the first two would be required here.
84
85The Norville Rx Companion
The Fitting Guide to Enhanced Reading Lenses contd.
As you can see from the examples above these lenses are very versatile. I have been dispensing these lenses on a regular basis to all presbyopic patients from the early presbyope to people of more advanced in years and they are my first choice of lens where distance vision is not required. I also regularly sell a pair in conjunction with a pair of PAL lenses as they complement each other. By doing this I am admitting that the PAL lens is not perfect.
Today I was speaking to a technical advisor who pointed out that if you look around an average office, monitors have been raised and lowered to give the users comfortable vision. This accentuates the problem that, apart from being able to have comfortable vision whilst working at a VDU monitor, it is also important to have a correct posture. This helps prevents neck & back problems. With these lenses the operators can achieve comfortable vision with a natural posture.
The applications of these lenses go through most trades and professional personnel who are presbyopic. A few that come to mind are: Musicians, Plumbers, Electricians, Librarians, Mechanics, as well as all office-based jobs. Doctors, Nurses, Dentists and all health care professionals where an examination has to be carried out and in optical practices dispensing PD measurements, screen type lens meter spectacle verification and not least lens surface inspection.
There is a large range of these lenses on the market and it is growing. Recently learnt of two new ones that are to be launched onto the UK market. Some can be fitted into ½ eye frames. They all vary in designs. I have dispensed most of these and in the main they are all good although some seem to be slightly better than others. They all vary in design as there are no two the same.
I have deliberately left off the technical data on these lenses as I covered this in the last article that I wrote but I have produced a Data sheet, which gives you all the relevant information as to degression zones and degression powers. This I can make available to you.
The best tip I have found in fitting these lenses is wherever possible the degression should be 0.50D less than the ADD this will give the user distance vision of up to 2 metres away.
A list of all the lenses are as follows: Sola Access Essilor Interview Norville Continuum Shamir Office Rodenstock Office Zeiss Business Hoya Add power Tokai Pro reader Nikon Soltes Norville VersatileAll the above lenses weaken off by anything from -0.75 up to -1.75 depending on the make and design.
The following ones are modified PAL lenses Norville Bureau Hoya Tact 1,2 & 3 Zeiss Gradal RD Essilor 3V Rodenstock Nexyma AXB
If ever the phrase practice makes perfect rings true then actually dispensing degressives is just that. I regularly dispense 10 pairs a week mostly as additional pairs so what are you doing for your clients?
86 The Norville Rx Companion
Occupational Progressive Powered Lenses
There has been a very signiicant change in the approach to progressive lens design. Free-form production has enabled the lens designer to ine tune the balance between the three vision zones of a progressive distance, intermediate and near. Different occupational needs require a change of emphasis in the dominance of any one over the others. Norville’s Ultor design is available as General Wear, Outdoor and Desk designs but when a more substantive design change is called for then these alter into Bureau (Indoor) and Freeway (Driving) designs which are distinct opposites in design physiology.
Indoor Occupational Progressive
Bureau HD Hoya Tact Zeiss Gradal RD Essilor C3V
These lenses should not be confused with enhanced reading lenses.
All these lenses are true progressive powered lenses offering 3 way vision from full distance (with the exception of the Zeiss Gradal RD which blurs the distance vision by 0.50D) to full near via intermediate vision. They are ordered with a reading addition whilst degression a minus degression on the reading Rx.
Unlike conventional PPL lenses where they are distance lenses with a reading facility, these are reading lenses with a distance facility. So all the distortion moved up into the distance giving you virtually edge to edge reading area.
How, when and where to use these lenses
These lenses are particularly useful for people on the move but who have a high demand for near and inter vision. A good example is a dispensing optician. We are on the move all the time helping patients choose frames, measuring PDs and marking up for PPL lenses, bifocals and enhanced reading lenses as well as writing out forms, orders and entering information into computers.
Hospital consultants and doctors are also on the move all the time. When inspecting patients they require good intermediate vision as well as near vision and then they need to enter their indings into a computer.
University lecturers quite often have their notes on a lectern; they also need the full distance vision to see what is going on at the back of the auditorium and will also require the near vision.
Teachers often need a greater priority to the near and inter vision but also requires some distance vision.
Top management who attend board meeting may need more scope than an enhanced reading lens can offer.
These are just a few examples but as dispensers it is up to you to establish which is the best option for theindividual vision needs of your client.
87The Norville Rx Companion
It’s difficult to believe that just 47 years ago round and D segment bifocals dominated multifocal
prescribing. In 1962 Bernard Maitenaz of Essel, Paris, later to merge with Silor to create Essilor, marketed
his first progressive design - glass Varilux. Some lens manufacturers are convinced that dispensers need
only two lens designs, single vision and progressive. I hasten to add not just one progressive but a family
of designs. We have come a long way from the original Essel Varilux that was hoped to suit all users, a
considerable learning curve has now prevailed in the view that a number of designs are necessary. Those
whose primary use is for distance with occasional reading, those for intermediate and reading with
occasional distance use. From just that one original lens form from the 1960s, we have today over 200
designs from lens manufacturers the world over. What a great tribute to the vision of Bernard Maitenaz.
Today’s range of progressives is available in almost every index, in every mineral or resin material, clear or
photochromic. With the opportunity to specify customised length of progressive corridor and inset, even
the choice of the progressive surface on either the convex or concave surface. Such a variety should satisfy
every potential user.
The key to successful wear is to accurately assess the user’s visual needs for distance, intermediate and
reading, then select the most appropriate technical design. Our Progressive Lens Comparison charts give
this information; remember that today there are many designs which accommodate to shallower frames,
the original guide of a minimum 22mm depth is superseded by lenses such as the Norville CF ranges and
Compact amongst others, with some who now claim designs for just 14mm of reading depth.
As progressives have no visible reference points, such as a segment line, the manufacturers from an
early date engraved (often very faintly! sometimes the opposite) two reference circles, their company
identification mark and the reading add. What is common to all progressives is the exact 34mm of
separation between the two horizontal reference points. What isn’t common is the height they use for the
major reference point (fitting cross), some at 2mm above most at 4mm above, one (Seiko) coincident at 0.
All progressive lenses arrive at the Rx house with the following (or very similar) marks.
Progressive Lenses
1) Distance power and axis checking semi-circle
2) Reading power checking circle, usually inset 2.5mm
3) 180 degree horizontal centre line, with engraved circles, manufacturers reference mark and reading addition
4) Prism checking point
5) Fitting cross (MRP)
References Varilux is a registered trade name of Essilor. Norville Progressive Lens Comparative Charts Publication. Successful Varifocal Dispensing Dr. Colin Fowler page A13
88 The Norville Rx Companion
As lens production technology has improved, it has afforded lens designers the opportunity to tighten up
physically the progressive area and offer shortened corridor lengths. Over many years, progressives have
moved from spherical distance designs with a seamless intermediate and reading to very sophisticated all
over aspheric lens forms. Even more so the fact that on some of the very latest highly advanced designs
the progressive surface has moved from the front surface to the rear lens curvature. So offering improved
field of view, due to the progressive surface now being nearer the centre of rotation of the wearer’s
eye. When you consider, this can be of significant difference where thicker plus lenses are concerned, all
brought about by the original SEIKO-EPSON patent, a lens design not only having its progressive surface
on the inside lens curvature but the cylindrical correction combined in with it as well. Think on that as an
aspheric cylindrical progressive surface. Now that’s optical design and production technology at its cutting
edge.
It is our own policy when supplying glazed progressives not to re-apply the yellow paint for reference lines
as, when you need to clean all this off for the patients use, a tide of yellow floats off into the spectacle
rims. Instead we use a detachable decal held in place by a “huff”, as illustrated below.
The diagram on the previous page depicts the typical inked markings on a Progressive lens.
However “in use” there will be no marking except those engraved into the lens surface. Unlike other lenses,
progressives are checked for power and axis at one point, whilst the optical centre (or prism checking point)
is located elsewhere. Whilst the itting cross height above the prism checking point will vary depending
upon the type of lens (e.g. the itting cross can be either at the same point, 2mm, 4mm or even 6mm above
the prism checking point) all progressives have a common point at which to check for prism. It can be easily
located by simply inding the manufacturers progressive circles or markings (these will always be 34mm
apart). Once located simply ‘dot’ them with a felt-tipped pen. Place on a protractor or manufacturers layout
chart and place a dot mid way between these circles (ig 8 below); this is the prism checking point. Placing
the lens in the focimeter with the centre ‘dotting pin’ over the prism checking point, read off any prism
value in the normal way. One can then advise the prescription house of any prism thinning and its (vertical)
direction. It is important to note it is from the same prism checking point that any prescribed prism should
also be ascertained.
ProgressiveExample of engraved markings
Progressive Lenses contd.
Reading addition engraved at Temporal positionFIGURE 8
PRISM CHECKING POINT
150 V2
89The Norville Rx Companion
Successful Varifocal Dispensing
• Accuracy in measurement is essential when dispensing varifocals. Remember to measure separate right
and left monocular PDs, as well as individual itting heights. The best accuracy is normally achieved for
the PD with a pupillometer, as this controls the ixation of the patient. But using a ruler or dotting the
centres with a felt tip pen can work just as well with practice as long as you remember the parallax and
height difference rules of measuring.
• When measuring pupil heights, make sure your eye height is the same as that of the patient.
This can be usually best achieved if you are both sitting down.
• Always note the measurements on the record. It is not advisable to just dot the pupil centres on to the
dummy lenses in the frame and send this off to the prescription laboratory.
• Make sure the chosen frame has adequate depth for a varifocal lens. Many ‘short corridor’ lenses are
now available for shallow frames, but do not change a patient to a new type of lens if they are satisied
with their present one.
• If you are inexperienced, or unsure about your measurements, try to use a frame where the centration
distance can be readily altered by adjusting the bridge, and the height can be changed by adjusting the
pads.
• Do not be afraid to tell patients who are having varifocals for the irst time of the disadvantages of
varifocal lenses, e.g. they will have to move their head more sideways because of the limited width
of clear vision at near. But stress that most wearers adapt to this quite quickly without noticing.
• When checking the lenses on the focimeter, remember to measure the lenses at the points speciied by
the manufacturer. Also remember that there may be vertical prism incorporated in each lens for cosmetic
thinning, rather than optical reasons.
• Do not erase the temporary lens markings till the lenses have been checked for centration on the patient.
Dr. Colin Fowler
90 The Norville Rx Companion
One of the chief advantages of Free-form technology is that it enables all progressive lenses to perform in the manner which
the designer intended. No longer is the performance dependent upon the prescription of the lens but can be optimized for any
power and combination of cylinder and axis direction. In addition, the individual, as-worn, mounting details of the lenses can
be incorporated in the design.
The performance of a typical progressive lens is frequently judged from an iso-cylinder plot which indicates the distribution
of astigmatism across the lens, the astigmatism being an inevitable consequence of the progressive surface. It was shown by
Minkwitz in 19631 that an increase in power of a surface is accompanied by an ever-increasing amount of surface astigmatism
as the eye roams perpendicularly from the meridian along which the power changes, the meridian line, along which the
astigmatism is zero. It will be realised that the progressive surface is aspherical and, in common with all aspherical surfaces,
possesses surface astigmatism. In the case of a progressive surface, the astigmatism increases at twice the rate of the increase in
power as the eye rotates horizontally out of the meridian line.
Figure 1 illustrates an iso-cylinder plot for a progressive lens of power 0.00 Add +2.50. The lens is 40mm in diameter and has a
total surface area of some 1257mm2. The distance zone which has less than 0.50D of aberrational astigmatism is some 578mm2.
The iso-cylinder plot relates only to a lens whose distance prescription is 0.00 D, and in view of the limitations imposed by the
Minkwitz condition, illustrates the optical performance of “best form” progressive power lens, in the sense that it indicates the
best optical performance that the lens designer is likely to achieve. Some manufacturers indicate their design’s performance by
methods other than iso-cylinder plots. For example, Hoya use Clearness Index plots which illustrate the variation in visual acuity
across the lens (Figure 2).
One of the most widely dispensed progressive lenses of recent years is Essilor’s Varilux Comfort design. The convex progressive
surface of each semi-inished blank is designed to provide optimum performance for a given power. Figure 3a illustrates a
contour plot for the inished lens when made to the design prescription. The lens has a wide clear distance zone, a progressive
corridor of reasonable width opening to a wide clear near vision zone. If the same semi-inished blank is used for a different
prescription, say one which incorporates a cylinder with an oblique axis, the contour plot may turn out to be similar to the one
depicted in Figure 3b.
Although the convex progressive surface is the same in each case, the geometry of the concave surface has caused the optical
performance to alter signiicantly. Instead of a spherical curve which the designer intended to be used, the combination of the
convex progressive surface and the toroidal surface has signiicantly narrowed the distance between
the iso-cylinder lines as well as altering the shapes and positions of the clear vision zones.
Professor Mo JalieSMSA, FBDO(Hons), Hon FCOptom,
Hon FCGI, MCIM - University of Ulster
Figure 2. Clearness Index plot for Hoyalux iD progressive lens, 0.00 Add +2.50.Courtesy of Hoya.
Figure 1. Iso-cylinder plot for progressive lens, 0.00 Add +2.50.
Progressive Lenses: the latest generation
91The Norville Rx Companion
Progressive Lenses: the latest generation
IT IS EASY TO UNDERSTAND WHY A GIVEN DESIGN MIGHT PROVE TO BE SUCCESSFUL IN THE CASE OF ONE PRESCRIPTION
BUT A COMPLETE FAILURE WHEN USED FOR A DIFFERENT PRESCRIPTION.
It is also easy to understand why many manufacturers do not publish iso-cylinder or mean power plots for their designs. The
plot would only relate to the particular prescription which the manufacturer has chosen to illustrate (typically 0.00 Add +2.00),
and, of course, it cannot be supposed that the information provided may be used to describe the performance of the design for
a different prescription, even if made with the same convex progressive surface!
Freeform manufacturing methods allow all prescriptions to be produced with contour plots similar to the one depicted
in Figure 1. The effect of combining the prescription with the progression surface can be analysed by the computer in real
time and the concave surface then computed to optimise the speciication for all the prescription information to hand.
There are several options for producing an optimised progressive lens. One of the irst suggestions was to retain
the traditional convex side progressive surface and to incorporate a free-form atoroidal surface on the concave
side of the lens. Such a design requires a stock of semi-inished progressive blanks to be maintained in various base
curve intervals each with a full range of near additions.
This design method enables all prescriptions to be made from the same semi-inished blank with an iso-cylinder plot similar
to that depicted in Figure 3a. Alternatively, the convex surface could be a simple spherical (or aspherical surface) and the
progression incorporated on the concave surface of the lens. Any prescription cylinder can be combined with the progressive
surface in the form of an atoroidal, progressive surface and the surface then optimised to obtain the correct design geometry.
The advantage of this method of production is that no special semi-inished inventory is required, the blank could end up as a
inished single vision lens or as a inished progressive lens depending upon what is worked on the concave surface.
The advantage of free-form production of progressive lenses is obvious. The geometry of the prescription surface is not
determined until the individual prescription is received by the surfacing laboratory. The required power, centration,
working distance and precise position of the lenses in front of the eyes, e.g., vertex distance, pantoscopic tilt and face form
angle, can all be included in the input speciication and the design software will analyse the ray path through many different
areas of the lens and output a surface description which has been optimised for the individual prescription.
References1 MINKWITZ.G. On the surface astigmatism of a ixed
symmetrical aspheric surface. J. OptAct (Lond)
1963;10:223-7.
Article provided by courtesy of Fabiano Group publisher of European Lenses and Technology.
Figure 3. Varilux Comfort designa) with a convex progressive surface and an optimised free-form atoroidal back surfaceb) with a convex progressive surface and ordinary toroidal back surface.Courtesy of Essilor
a) optimised design with a free-form atoroidal surface
b) unoptimised design with simple toroidal surface
The Norville Rx Companion
Prescription for success
A special reminder from Professor Mo Jalie of an important aspect of
spectacle lens dispensing that is far too often overlooked.
It is curious that, whereas everyone pays attention to the correct
horizontal centration of spectacle lenses, far less attention is paid
to how they should be centred in the vertical meridian.
Lens fitting - the centre of rotation condition
By Professor Mo Jalie
In general, the simplest method for obtaining the correct vertical and horizontal centration of
spectacle lenses is to adopt exactly the same routine used for locating the correct position of the fitting
cross when dealing with progressive power lenses.
With the correctly adjusted frame in situ, the positions of the centres of the subject’s pupils can be
marked on the lenses when the eyes are in the primary position looking into the distance. If the frame is
unglazed, the positions can be marked on transparent adhesive tape attached to the frame. The required
horizontal positions of the optical centres from the middle of the frame bridge can then be recorded as
the monocular centration distances, and the correct height of the optical centres obtained by satisfying the
centre of rotation condition. This governs the vertical centration of spectacle lenses, and is illustrated in
Figure 1.
Spectacle lenses are mounted before the eyes in a plane approximately parallel to the plane joining
the supra-orbital ridge to the chin. This plane is usually inclined at an angle of between 5° and 15° to the
normal to the primary direction of the eye and the angle is referred to as the pantoscopic angle. If the
line of the side of the spectacle frame is horizontal, as it often is, the pantoscopic angle is the same as the
angle of side. In order for the optical performance of the lens to match that which the designer intended,
it is necessary for the optical axis of the lens to pass through the eye’s centre of rotation. This can be
achieved by lowering the optical centre of the lens to compensate for the tilted spectacle plane.
Figure 1 The centre of rotation condition
Typically the pantascopic angle is 10ϒ.
visual axis
optical axis
optimum positionfor optical centre
pantascopic angle
92
The Norville Rx Companion
Prescription for success contd.
Figure 2 The centre of rotation condition in distance vision
Primary visual axis for DV
Optical axis
D
O
R
D = distance visual point
R = eye’s centre of rotation
O = optical centre of lens
OR = s
DO = s tan θ
θ
Bar Chart 1 Vertical centration of lenses and pantascopic angle
15ϒ12.5ϒ10ϒ5ϒ 7.5ϒ2.5ϒ012345678
PANTASCOPIC ANGLE
LOW
ER O
PTIC
AL C
ENTR
E (m
m)
7.26.0
4.8
3.6
2.4
1.2
93
The amount by which the optical centre should be lowered, DO, can be deduced from Figure 2.
If the pantoscopic angle is denoted by θ, and the distance from the back vertex of the lens to the eye’s
centre of rotation by s then the amount by which the optical centre should be lowered, DO, can be seen
to be DO = s tan θ.
Bar Chart 1 gives values of DO for various values of pantoscopic tilt, θ, when s is assumed to be
27mm. The dispensing rule, that the optical centre should be lowered by 0.5mrn for every 1° angle of
pantoscopic angle, has its origin here.
It can be deduced from the bar chart that, in general, the optical centre of a lens should not be
placed directly in front of the centre of the eye’s pupil, but on average some 4 to 5mm below the pupil
centre. In practice, this position of the optical centre is often obtained with no specific instruction on the
prescription order, simply because modern cosmetic dispensing dictates that the frame occupies such a
position that the centre of the pupil lies 4 to 8mm above the horizontal centre line (HCL). If the dispensing
optician does not give any instructions to the contrary, it is usual for the prescription house to place the
optical centre at its own standard optical centre position, which is either on the HCL or 1 to 3mm above it.
This practice has the obvious advantage that the edge thicknesses at the top and bottom edge of the lens
will match more closely.
94 The Norville Rx CompanionThe Norville Rx Companion
Prescription for success contd.
Figure 3 The centre of rotation condition in near vision
It is an easy matter to ensure that the optical centres occupy the correct position in the vertical meridian.
The pupil centres can be dotted using exactly the same method described earlier for obtaining monocular CDs.
Alternatively, in the case of an empty frame, the height of the pupil centre can be measured up from the lower
horizontal tangent to the lens periphery. In order to compensate for the pantoscopic angle, the optical centre
of the lens must now be lowered from this position by the amount given in Bar Chart 1.
By way of example, suppose the pupil centres are found to lie at a height of 28mm above the lower
horizontal tangents to the lens periphery and the pantoscopic angle is 10°. Using the bar chart, the optical
centres need to be 5mm lower than the measured pupil height and a height of 23mm should be ordered for the
optical centres. If the height of the HCL is known to be 24mm, then the instruction to the glazing department
might be: “OC Imm below HCL”.
ASPHERIC LENSES
The advent of aspheric lenses for the normal power range has emphasized the importance of the correct
vertical centration of spectacle lenses.
Before 1985, aspheric lenses were reserved for the high-power plus range and in such cases, the very
nature of the prescription made the dispensing optician proceed with the centring of lenses with great care.
The use of aspherical surfaces for low-power prescriptions demands that the same attention to detail be paid
in fitting the lenses. This is because the pole of the aspherical surface should also be made to coincide with the
visual axis when it passes normally through the aspherical surface. This is achieved simply by obeying the rule
for centration given above.
In cases of anisometropia, lowering the optical centres may give rise to discomfort since a vertical
differential prismatic effect will be introduced at the distance visual points. In such cases it would be usual to
specify the vertical positions of the optical centres of the lenses. For distance vision they would normally be
placed directly in front of the centres of the pupils when the eyes occupy the primary position. In these cases,
unless the pantoscopic angle is zero ie the lens is not tilted at all, the wearer cannot benefit fully from the best-
form principle of the lens. On the other hand, if the lens is mounted perpendicular to the primary direction of
sight, the bottom edge of the lens will appear to jut out from the cheek and the cosmetic appearance of the
frame will suffer.
Primary visual axis for DV
Optical axis
Near visualaxis
D
O
N
R
D = distance visual point
R = eye’s centre of rotation
O = optical centre of lens
N = near visual point
94
95The Norville Rx Companion
Prescription for success contd.
Figure 4 The centre of rotation condition for a bifocal lens.OD is the optical centre of the distance portion. The vertical distance from OD to the segment top is defined as the segment drop
N0 D
The Norville Rx Companion 95
VERTICAL CENTRATION IN NEAR VISION
When the spectacle lens has been correctly centred for distance vision by lowering the optical centre
to compensate for the pantoscopic angle, no further vertical decentration of the optical centre is necessary for
near vision. This should be obvious from Figure 3, where it will be seen that lowering the optical centre of the
lens results in the centre of the distance visual zone lying as far above the optical centre as the centre of the
near visual zone lies below the optical centre. In other words, centring the lenses correctly for distance vision in
the vertical meridian also simultaneously centres them correctly for near vision.
BIFOCAL LENSES
The centre of rotation condition applies equally to bifocal lenses and can be satisfied whenever there
is control over the centration of the distance portion. In order to satisfy the centre of rotation condition, the
distance optical centre should be lowered so that it lies close to, or even coincident with, the segment top
(segment extreme point). Needless to say, placement of the distance optical centre is controlled in the surfacing
department when finishing the second side of the lens. The vertical distance from the optical centre of the
distance portion to the segment top is defined as the segment drop. This value can be stipulated when the
bifocal lenses are ordered from the prescription laboratory to ensure that the vertical centration of the distance
portion is correct. Figure 4 illustrates a flat top bifocal where the segment drop is Imm, even though the
segment top position is 3mm below the horizontal centre line.
PROGRESSIVE POWER LENSES
In the case of progressive lenses, the centre of rotation condition is not usually satisfied in that the
centration of the distance portion is completely ignored. The reason for this is that it is customary to work a
thinning prism across the lens to equalize the thickness at the top and bottom of the lens. The fitting cross is
normally placed before the centre of the pupil of the eye, to ensure that the meridian line, which is the centre
of the progressive corridor of the lens, lies in the optimum position for the eyes when they converge and
depress to use the intermediate and near portions. In the absence of any thinning prism, the optical centre of
the distance portion is located at the geometrical centre of the blank which, depending upon the design, lies
some 4 to 6mm below the fitting cross position.
96 The Norville Rx Companion
The case for compensating the prescriptionof lenses in wrap-around frames
Figure 1.
Figure 2.
Periodically there is a fashion for spectacle frames where the lenses are tilted round to follow the contours
of the face. These are know as ‘wrap-around’, or ‘sports’ frames, and in the USA as ‘face-form’ frames!
With this type of frame, the visual axes are no longer parallel to the optic axes of the lenses in distance
vision. The lenses are tilted by an angle, which we will call here the ‘wrap angle’, which is given by the
value w in igure 2.
The effect of this tilt is to induce a power error to the lenses. Most signiicantly is an induced cylinder, axis
90, although there is generally a small sphere error as well. Using ray tracing techniques, these errors can be
readily calculated. For example, if a +5.00 DS lens with a front surface curve of+8.00 and a refractive index
of 1.5 is tilted by an angle (w) of 25°, then the effective power along the visual axis will be +5.22 / +0.95
x 90. It would then be possible to compensate for this by manufacturing a lens with a suitable correction
incorporated.
Dr. Colin Fowler
Conventional spectacle lens theory generally assumes that when a distant object is viewed, the visual axes
are parallel, and that these axes pass through the lenses parallel to the optical axes (igure 1.)
The Norville Rx Companion96
97The Norville Rx Companion
The case for compensating the prescriptionof lenses in wrap-around frames
The power would now be correct when viewing straight ahead with parallel visual axes. It would of course
be necessary to tilt the lenses by the correct angle when checking their power on a focimeter.
But unfortunately we do not spend all our time looking through one point on a lens. Our eyes are
constantly scanning the visual world. So if we look to one side, still at a distant object, then we have the
situation in igure 3. If we assume that the eyes have made a version movement to the right approximately
equivalent to the wrap angle, then the right eye will now be looking through the lens with the visual axis
parallel to the optic axis of the lens. Thus from the above example, there will be now unwanted cylinder
being experienced by the eye. The visual axis of the left eye, on the other hand, will be making a much
larger angle with the optic axis of the left eye, and will be experiencing oblique viewing power errors
whose magnitude will depend on the form of the lens.
Fortunately, the brain is used to making the most of disparate images from the two eyes, so this may not be
too much of a problem - it very much depends on the individual.
So should we be making a compensation for the change induced in the prescription or not?
As with all these problems there is no simple answer. For low and medium prescriptions (less than ±4.00 D)
it is probably not worth it. For higher prescriptions, it will depend to a large extent on the visual habits of
the wearer. Persons making restricted eye movements (‘head turners’) may well beneit at higher powers.
We at Norville believe in giving you a choice. Prescriptions can be modiied if required.
The compensated power of the inished lenses will be supplied to assist with lens veriication.
References Fry,G.A. ‘Face-form frames’ Journal of the American Optometric Association 49 31-38(1978)
Figure 3.
The Norville Rx Companion 97
Part IV
SPECIFICSELLING ADVICE
FOR INDIVIDUAL
LENS TYPES
99The Norville Rx Companion
Polarised is the best
What is wrong with
tinted CR39?Why not photochromic?
How to demonstrate
Polarised lenses
Improve the performance
with a coating
Recommend and sell
Polarised lensesTell your Patients
Selling Points — Polarised Lenses
• If you do not already have a polarised demonstrator then you
should get one. When viewed through a polarised lens you
can see the scene behind it quite clearly but with a standard
sunglass the scene continues to be obliterated by the relected
light.
• This is by far the best way to demonstrate this lens.
D-Sp B5
• You wear a seat belt for safety in case of an accident.
• You make sure your vision is up to the legal standard for driving
• But as soon as the sun comes out any old pair of sunglasses will do!!!!
• Make your next pair of sunglasses as safe as putting on your seat belt. D-Sp B1
The Opening Gambit
Polarised sunglasses are the only ones that:
• Cut glare from direct sunlight.
• Cut the relected glare - especially from wet roads.
• Cut glare from water for ishing and sailors.
• Cut glare from the back windows when following other cars.
• Combined with reducing dangerous UV
So supply polarised as standard not as an upgrade D-Sp B2
• Photochromic lenses react mainly to UV light.
• The windscreen of a car ilters out some UV light, therefore
they will not darken down much. At the best it will only be a
comfort tint but will not be an effective sunglass.
• DRIVEWEAR is the one exception. Polarised combined with a special photochromic that darkens behind windscreens
D-Sp B3
• The answer is nothing provided you don’t want to cut glare. As an effective sunglass for most outdoor activities you cannot beat a good polarised sunglass.
• The only advantages of CR39 are that you can put all sorts of fashion tints on them. Some sports require special tints that are only available in CR39, and for some eye conditions you also require special tints.
• When using CR39 you must make sure the tint incorporates UV iltration.
• For all the rest polarised is the best. D-Sp B4
• The ideal coating for this lens is the INAR as you do not need the AR on the outside of the lens.
• There is a version in polycarb material with a mirror coat.
• The lenses can be tinted darker although already 15% LTF.
• They have full UV iltration. The melanin version has extra UV iltration.
D-Sp B6
Polarised Sunglasses
• Are more comfortable overall outdoors, reduce eyestrain.
• Improve contrast for sharper vision and increased safety.
• Provide greater depth perception.
• Enhance colours.
• Provide full UV protection.
D-Sp B7
• Every one who drives a car.
• Anyone involved in outdoor activities.
• Contact lens wearers.
• Photophobic patients (due to health problems or medications).
• Older patients.
• Older patients who drive - offer Drivewear
• Post cataract surgery or Lasik patients who are more sensitive to glare than before.
• Everyone looking for “cool” sun lenses. D-Sp B8
© P. Sanders Dispensing Steps
100 The Norville Rx Companion
The Ultimate
Dispensing ToolA pair of Vocational
Spectacles
People who can’t get on
with multifocal lensesAdvantages to the wearer
The Next QuestionThe Opening Gambit
What do we call these
lenses?The Horrors Scenario
Selling Points — Versatile Reading Lenses
• Greater depth of focus. Instead of just being able to focus
in at normal close reading distance, the wearer will be able
to see up to arms length and sometimes beyond.
• Comfortable vision for the whole time whilst at work.
• In many cases comfortable vision will be up to 2m away
which is enough distance vision to walk round an ofice
without having to remove ones spectacles.
You need to tell the client they now require their 1st pair of
spectacles for reading.
Horrors!!
There are two choices:
• When solely reading spectacles are suficient.
• The other is when an enhanced reading lens is suitable in
conjunction with a pair of multifocal lenses, be it bifocals
or progressive powered lenses.
• Ofice lenses (but most people who beneit from them will
not work in an ofice).
• Computer lenses (the beneit again is not just for computer
users).
• Versatile reading lenses. This is an easy descriptive title that
the public can relate to.
• Enhanced reading lenses. This is also a good descriptive title
that the public will understand.
• Would you like standard reading lenses or enhanced
reading lenses?
• Although the customer/patient will not understand the
difference at this point they will now know that there is
an alternative to standard reading spectacles.
What is the difference?
• This question I usually ask before the customer / patient has
to ask it themselves.
The usual answer is:
• Would you like a pair of reading spectacles that are designed
purely for reading, or a pair that will be good for reading,
computer use and be comfortable for both your close or
near visual requirements?
• People who ind progressive or bifocals restrictive get on
well with these lenses.
• The reason for this is that most multifocal lenses are designed
as dynamic lenses. That is to say that they are designed for
people on the move.
• Versatile readers are static lenses, therefore any unwanted
distortion is positioned more to the edge of the lens rather
than to the bottom of the lens.
• Progressive lenses and bifocals are distance lenses with a
reading facility.
• This means that for computer use they are far from ideal.
The posture that progressive users adopt to view VDU
screens can be most uncomfortable and can in the long
term cause neck and back problems.
• The answer is a pair of enhanced reading lenses.
• In this situation it is good to call them Ofice lenses.
• The Versatile Lens Demonstration set.
• How did we cope without it?
• It instantly demonstrates the difference between a standard
reading lens and an enhanced reading lens.
• The customer leaves knowing exactly what they have ordered
and looking forward to receiving their new Versatile reading
lenses.
D-Sp C2 D-Sp C1
D-Sp C3 D-Sp C4
D-Sp C5 D-Sp C6
D-Sp C7 D-Sp C8
101The Norville Rx Companion
Selling Points — RF Coatings
• We are selling something that is almost abstract. In fact the more abstract that it is, the better it is.
• So we are selling something that the public can hardly see.
• So to call it a coating to make the lenses clearer makes more sense to the public than to call it an anti-relection coat.
D-Sp A5
So how should we
phrase this?
Question:
What is RF coat?
• Sir / madam would you like an anti relection coat??
• The response could be “does its coat have a fur lining!!”
• The answer makes as much sense to you as the question does to the customer.
D-Sp A1
The Opening Gambit
Relate to the public
Our Goal
Does this make
sense to the public?
Why do we
offer this coating?
Is a dispense complete
without an RF coat?
“Do you want aClear lens or a standard lens.”
The answer is obvious that mostpeople will want a clear lens.
Strictly speaking we should be saying.“Do you want a
Standard lens or a clearer lens”
D-Sp A2
Use scenarios that the public can relate to
• If they drive, use the glare from headlights.
• If they use computers use the annoying relections from strip lights & the screen.
• People who require eye to eye contact such as salesmen.
• Vanity. The lenses improved the appearance.
• Finally the sheer pleasure of looking through a clearer lens.
D-Sp A3
• We call this an anti relection coating but there is a hue (normally emerald) that can be seen (Is that not a relection!)
• Strictly speaking it is not an anti relection coating because there is still some residual relections when looking at the lens from certain angles.
• Consumers will ind the term Relection Free (RF) easier.
• In any case it is true that from the wearers point of view it is an anti relection coat, as they are now getting 99% of the light passing through the lens.
D-Sp A4
• For myopic patients the cost of a stock RF coated lens and that of a standard lens is not that great.
• So why do we not recommend a RF as standard?
• Nearly all high index stock lenses are supplied with an RF coat and it is presumed that if a customer wants a high index lens that they want the coating.
• So why not make the same presumption with any other index lenses including standard CR39.
D-Sp A6
• If you do not offer the customer an RF coat they can not say if they want it or not.
• A lens dispense is not complete without an RF coat.
• An RF coat represents good value for money the work involved in coating a lens is quite time consuming.
• Ask the wearer if they really want to lose 8% of available light through unwanted relections?
D-Sp A7
• Our goal is to make an RF coating standard on all lenses and non coating be the exception.
• This is the case in Japan.
• In the UK the coatings supplied vary from as little as 5% in some practices up to 75+% in others.
• The disparity is partly due to the afluence in certain areas but also to the ability of the dispenser to put the message across.
• The message is clear - RF coating improves the quality of vision.
D-Sp A8
102 The Norville Rx Companion
Dispensers Aware!!
A Danger to Navigation
A special thank you goes to OPTICIAN reader MD Mansield, who brought to our attention an item in Maritime Feedback, a Maritime Safety Newsletter from the Conidential Hazardous Incident Reporting Programme. His diligence may just avert a maritime disaster or the threat of litigation to suppliers of magnetic clip-on sunglasses.
“On a passage on a small yacht as crew I had occasion to disagree with the owner about the bearing of a navigation mark. My reading using binoculars (with an incorporated bearing compass) was 160 degrees and hers, with a type of hand bearing compass used by many sailors, which hangs around the neck and is held up to the eye, was 200 degrees. When I used her compass the reading was again 160 degrees.
There had to be some local deviation about her person and, as a joke, I suggested her glasses. After a few moments she said that she had glasses which had clip-on sunglasses, which were magnetically attached! It transpired that her glasses frames were magnetised and this was the local deviation which she had not noticed before!”
The advice box that followed stated: ‘In the absence of a cross-check this could have led to a serious incident. Current training suggests if all else fails use a hand-held compass! The RYA has been informed and intends to raise awareness of the issue.’ You have been warned.
Reprinted from The Optician. December 17, 2004 No. 5982, Vol. 228
Polarised Rx
One of the areas of care when glazing polarised lenses is to ensure that the polarising axis is always maintained exactly along the 180° reference line. Not a problem with bifocals and progressives but can be tricky with meniscus prescription lenses. One of our glazing technicians devised his own Murray test whereby when he couldn’t see the numbers of his digital watch when held vertically in front of him, he knew it was an on axis polarised lens but he could read the time if it was twisted off axis.
Likewise we’ve heard the comment that some BMW car owners found that their instrumentation was blank unless they held their head sideways when wearing polarised lenses, however this is not the case with certain other marques. So a warning particularly to drivers and airline pilots that they should be mindful that any digital instrumentation remains visible when wearing polarised lenses. Fortunately now all car windscreens by law are laminated, when older versions were being toughened their spots would show up viewed through polarised lenses.
Skiing Prescription Wear
Most interesting to read a newspaper article describing someone who had lost their sun specs whilst skiing and spent the rest of the day out on the slopes with no eye protection. How the resulting snow blindness ruined the rest of their holiday with the outcome of making a promise always to carry a spare pair of sunglasses. It also pointed out that skiing is one of the UK’s favourite winter sports. One might suggest many optical practices are totally unprepared for the needs of their skiing or altitude holiday patients. Norvilles have been serious about sports Rx specs for many years yet so many optical outlets are treating this as an occasional or very subsidiary part of the business of supplying eye care. How do we know? Because very few practices are stocking a range of prescription sports eyewear. Why don’t you make a resolution to get serious on this so ensuring that you’ve the products in practice to discuss with the patient as and when the opportunities arrive “are you going on holiday soon”? Oh skiing. Really, what arrangements have you made for your prescription wear? Can I show you some of the options for contact lens or spec wearers? Rather than say “perhaps can you come back once I get some examples in from my supplier”, great turn off!!
.....and we close this edition with a
Dry Eye Story
Might you be driving in the Lake District and become concerned at the vision of a lady driving herMorris 1000 convertible whilst wearing swimming goggles, don’t be alarmed - it was her optician’sanswer to a dry eye problem, which worked by the way!
103The Norville Rx Companion
have a number of technical booklets and reprints available
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Photochromic performance is infl uenced by temperature, UV exposure and lens material.
October 2011
Progressive lenses:
the latest generation
One of the chief advantages of Freeform technology is that it enables all progressive lenses to perform in the manner which
the designer intended. No longer is the performance dependent upon the prescription of the lens but can be optimized for any
power and combination of cylinder and axis direction. In addition, the individual, as-worn, mounting details of the lenses can
be incorporated in the design.
The performance of a typical progressive lens is frequently judged from an iso-cylinder plot which indicates the
distribution of astigmatism across the lens, the astigmatism being an inevitable consequence of the progressive surface. It was
shown by Minkwitz in 19631 that an increase in power of a surface is accompanied by an ever-increasing amount of surface
astigmatism as the eye roams perpendicularly from the meridian along which the power changes, the meridian line, along
which the astigmatism is zero. It will be realised that the progressive surface is aspherical and, in common with all aspherical
surfaces, possesses surface astigmatism. In the case of a progressive surface, the astigmatism increases at twice the rate of the
increase in power as the eye rotates horizontally out of the meridian line.
Figure 1 illustrates an iso-cylinder plot for a progressive lens of power 0.00 Add +2.50. The lens is 40mm in diameter and has a
total surface area of some 1257mm2. The distance zone which has less than 0.50D of aberrational astigmatism is some 578mm2.
The iso-cylinder plot relates only to a lens whose distance prescription is 0.00 D, and in view of the limitations imposed by the
Minkwitz condition, illustrates the optical performance of “best form” progressive power lens, in the sense that it indicates the
best optical performance that the lens designer is likely to achieve. Some manufacturer’s indicate their design’s performance by
methods other than iso-cylinder plots. For example, Hoya use Clearness Index plots which illustrate the variation in visual acuity
across the lens (Figure 2).
One of the most widely dispensed progressive lenses of recent years is Essilor’s Varilux Comfort design. The convex progressive
surface of each semi-inished blank is designed to provide optimum performance for a given power. Figure 3a illustrates a
contour plot for the inished lens when made to the design prescription. The lens has a wide clear distance zone, a progressive
corridor of reasonable width opening to a wide clear near vision zone. If the same semi-inished blank is used for a different
prescription, say one which incorporates a cylinder with an oblique axis, the contour plot may turn out to be similar to the one
depicted in Figure 3b.
Although the convex progressive surface is the same in each case, the geometry of the concave surface has caused the optical
performance to alter signiicantly. Instead of a spherical curve which the designer intended to be used, the combination of the
convex progressive surface and the toroidal surface has signiicantly narrowed the distance between
the iso-cylinder lines as well as altering the shapes and positions of the clear vision zones.
Professor Mo Jalie
SMSA, FBDO(Hons), Hon FCOptom,
Hon FCGI, MCIM - University of Ulster
Figure 2. Clearness Index plot for Hoyalux iD progressive lens, 0.00 Add +2.50.
Courtesy of Hoya.
Figure 1. Iso-cylinder plot for progressive lens, 0.00 Add +2.50.
Vista-Mesh Progressive lenses. Prof Mo Jalie
Progear Optical
and can recommend the following:-
provide these additional technical publications and catalogues
Frames Sports Frames Equipment
www.norville.co.uk
ALLYN
GLAZED PACKAGE
ACETATES & METALS
June 2011
FRAME
DIRECTORY
2011–2012
FINISHED
STOCK LENS
CATALOGUE
2011/12
Allyn Peepers/Shade Control sunwear Low Vision 1 Low Vision 2
Lenses Finished Stock Lenses Digital Free-form Technical Directory
Magdala Road, Gloucester, GL1 4DG. Tel: 01452 528686 Fax: 01452 411094E Mail: [email protected] Web: www.norville.co.uk
DIGITAL
FREE-FORM
TECHNICAL
DIRECTORY
November 2011
2nd Edition