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Warning: This is a relatively older thread This discussion is older than 360 days. Some information contained in it may no longer be current.
He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose
There are no great men, only great challenges that ordinary men are forced by circumstances to meet.
But what were/are the rules for sharpshooters/spotters regarding glasses, no disrespect intended, in the US army or are they just doing a bit of "add-hock-sharpshooting"? Obviously the presence of glasses may indicate that neither soldier have the best of eyesight, again no disrespect intended.
the rules for sharpshooters/spotters regarding glasses
These guys could easily just be mudrollers, one guy doing watch and directing his buddy to poke a guy. That's just a stock M14 so I don't think there's anything special. Remember, glasses are corrective lenses. They give you correct vision. I don't think these guys are anything but standard rifle section.
I spent a lot of time in really bad weather as a cavalry scout and an infantryman for 20 years wearing glasses. And I always shot expert during qualification rain, shine, or snow.
Last edited by eb in oregon; 02-06-2024 at 12:11 PM.
Remember, glasses are corrective lenses. They give you correct vision
Originally Posted by browningautorifle
Remember, glasses are corrective lenses. They give you correct vision.
I qualified expert multiple times with glasses and very poor vision without them.
I had surgery a few years back. Changed everything. I regret not doing it sooner. However, having perfect uncorrected vision makes muscles in your eyes have to work different, and in a way I was not used to causing strain and headaches. My eye doctor gave me +0.5 readers. I couldn't tell the difference with or without them. He said "just trust me"...wouldnt ya know no eyestrain staring at a screen all day or reading all day anymore.
I wear +0.5 in my shooting glasses now too and can hold focus on the front sight post better and longer than before. Even if you don't need them, give some +0.5 or up to +1.0 safety glasses a try when shooting. I bet your performance is better! Glasses aren't just about "correcting". In fact, I have several pairs going up to +1.5. The longer the sight radius, the less power needed to help out.