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Gehmann Diopter

Posted: Fri Jun 30, 2023 6:06 am
by jhodge
Anybody who has an astigmatism tried the Gehmann non-magnified -5 to +5 diopter? Sure seems like the way to go instead of lenses and frames, but I've never tried one. Any input appreciated>

Jay

Re: Gehmann Diopter

Posted: Fri Jun 30, 2023 11:40 am
by GolfShot
Just a heads up its non-compliant as per ISSF rules. So unfortunately if you are entering competitions you will need to stick to glasses / monocle.

Re: Gehmann Diopter

Posted: Fri Jun 30, 2023 12:13 pm
by colinlp
I used one for a couple of years. It does the job well but with a slight dimming of the image which is only noticeable on a very dim range.

Dead easy to set up, you just need your sphere and Cyl measurements from your optician, dial those in and fit it to your rearsight in the correct orientation; dial in the best sight picture with your dioptre and that's it

But as stated it's not ISSF compliant if that's an issue. Despite the lack of magnification it still has a system of multiple lenses which isn't allowed

Re: Gehmann Diopter

Posted: Fri Jun 30, 2023 8:09 pm
by jhodge
Not so worried about the ISSF compliancy issue. I have a standard Gehman 510 (I think that's what it is) adjustable iris, I'm under the impression I need the 579 cylinder to work with that?

Thanks,
Jay

Re: Gehmann Diopter

Posted: Sat Jul 01, 2023 1:19 am
by Tim S
Jay,

I think the 579 is just cylindrical correction. You'd also need part 50300-0 to get the non-magnifying focal length correction too.

Unless your eyesight changes frequently a single lens combining distance and astigmatism in a monocle holder would be cheaper, at least over here, than the 579 + 50300-0.

Re: Gehmann Diopter

Posted: Sat Jul 01, 2023 7:00 am
by Bryan996
I use one and I'm very happy with it. Please note that it doesn't fix astigmatism, for that you'll need to add the Gehmann cylindrical system. My astigmatism isn't that bad so I don't bother with correcting it. What I like about the Gehmann 50300-0 is that when I'm shooting in the evenings indoors (after a day of work in front of a screen) during the winter I literally loose sharpness over the period of a couple of hours. With a fixed lens there's nothing I can do however since adding the gehmann I can instantly dial the correction and get a sharp picture back. My only complaint is that it has no index marking so once its set up you cant tell if you're at +1 or +2 for example. Oh the other complaint is the price! But it has sort of paid for itself as I was spending around £100 every year to get a new lens made up as my prescription changed.

Re: Gehmann Diopter

Posted: Fri Jul 07, 2023 6:10 am
by ShootingSight
Waste of money. It is hugely complicated to dial everything in. A lot easier is to take your distance vision lens (Sphere, Cylinder, Axis values), add +0.5 to the sphere value, and get that one lens made. You can mount that lens in eyeglasses, a monacle system, in the rear sight, in shooting frames like Knobloch.

Your eye correction does not change on a day to day basis, so paying a lot of extra money to get an adjustable system, and one that is clunky to use, makes little sense.