Thread: Zenni again
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RangersSuck RangersSuck is offline
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Default Zenni again

On Jul 21, 2:17*pm, "chaniarts" wrote:
rangerssuck wrote:
I just got my new zenni order, and once again, they did great, for
cheap. Threee pairs of glasses (two progressive and one single-vision)
for $102.45 including shipping. Last time I bought locally, I paid
close to $600 for one pair.


I KNOW that my vision changes during the day, and I'm sure that my
prescription isn't as "perfect" as it could be. I'd also like to
customize my prescription for my various workstations. I know that can
be done with math and a ruler, but I'd really like to be able to zero
it in as close as possible. There was someone who posted here a while
back that they had purchased a set of trial lenses and made their own
prescriptions. I'm thinking I could do the same. Trial lens sets are
about $200 on ebay


There is this set for $225 with 158 pieces:
http://cgi.ebay.com/B-New-Trial-Lens...Shiny-Rim-/320...


and this set for $325 with 226 pieces
http://cgi.ebay.com/266-pcs-Metal-Ri...al-Frame-Br-Ne...


my prescription falls into the lower range of diopters, so the extra
lenses wouldn't make a difference for me right now, but I wonder
whether it's penny wise and pound foolish to get the smaller set.


OR, there is this set with 232 pieces but in plastic rims for $225
http://cgi.ebay.com/B-New-Trial-Lens...c-Shiny-Rim-/3...


So, my questions a


Is there anything wrong with using the plastic rims (remember I'm only
going to use these a few times a year), or are the metal rims way
better (that's the metal content to keep on-topic) ?


Does it make sense to buy the larger set?


If I do this for myself and for my wife a couple of times, the cost of
the lenses will be covered by what we would have paid at the eye
doctor in insurance copays. I'm thinking that with our current
prescriptions to get into the ball park, I ought to be able to dial it
in better than the doctor did. Is this a truly goofy idea, or am I
likely to be successful in getting a better prescription?


do you only get a prescription at the eye doctor? they're supposed to do a
complete eye exam, which you still would need to pay a copay for. the cost
of a glass prescription is minimal.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


They do a complete exam, and the prescription is, indeed, part of
that, but my concern is that the testing is done in their office under
their lighting conditions at their time of day on their day of the
week. I know for sure that my vision changes through the day, and
varies depending on how much sleep I've had and who-knows-what other
factors. If I could check my eyes on my own schedule at my own
location, I THINK I could get a better result.

Interestingly (or really annoyingly), my previous insurance carrier
would only pay for the medical part of the examination and not the
refraction (prescription) part. I had to pay separately, about $30 for
that.