magnification
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- Hans Weilenmann
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Re: magnification
Otto,
I place my vise such that the hook is positioned where it is the most convenient to get to for tying the pattern (99% of the time), not where it would be for the convenience of staring at it face on (very small percentage). You have to decide what is for you the "most convenient" position.
Cheers,
Hans W
I place my vise such that the hook is positioned where it is the most convenient to get to for tying the pattern (99% of the time), not where it would be for the convenience of staring at it face on (very small percentage). You have to decide what is for you the "most convenient" position.
Cheers,
Hans W
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Re: magnification
hans,
i am left handed, so the vice is always to my right and position it so that it is comfortable for me. thanks for the responses and being new to the forum i will have lots more questions. thanks again. otto
i am left handed, so the vice is always to my right and position it so that it is comfortable for me. thanks for the responses and being new to the forum i will have lots more questions. thanks again. otto
Re: magnification
BTW... on the topic of magnification, has any one tried the bifocal Maui Jim sunglasses recently? A friend of mine picked up a pair recently, and I found the quality to be excellent.
Aaron
Aaron
Aaron Laing, New Westminster BC
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- chase creek
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Re: magnification
On the subject of left/right. I'm right handed and always have the vise on the left. Ran into a fellow one time who always faced the end of the jaws. He was a pretty good tyer. I tried it, but it just felt too awkward to work in that position. Maybe I didn't give it enough time. I guess, like a lot of things, it all depends on what you're used to.
"A thing is right when it tends to preserve the integrity, stability, and
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beauty of the biotic community. It is wrong when it tends otherwise"
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- Eric Peper
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Re: magnification
Haven't used the Maui Jims bifocals, but I do have Smith Action Optics glasses with 2.25 magnifiers in the bottom of the lenses. I am just finishing the second season with them, and I've been delighted. Had a temple piece fracture after last season (pilot error), and I had a new pair from them within ten days -- no cost. Good people. FWIW, I do have a pair of glass lens Maui Jims that I've had for at least 10 years -- the frames were replaced once (after about 8 years) at a $40 charge, which I felt was reasonable. In fact, I was amazed they still had the same frames available.skunkaroo wrote:BTW... on the topic of magnification, has any one tried the bifocal Maui Jim sunglasses recently? A friend of mine picked up a pair recently, and I found the quality to be excellent.
Aaron
EP
A mountain is a fact -- a trout is a moment of beauty known only to men who seek them.
Al McClane in his Introduction to The Practical Fly Fisherman . . . often erroneously attributed to Arnold Gingrich
Al McClane in his Introduction to The Practical Fly Fisherman . . . often erroneously attributed to Arnold Gingrich
- crazy4oldcars
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Re: magnification
I recently had to go to progressive lenses for every day wear. When I was in the chair, I asked the Eye-doc to up the highest magnification a bit to help with tying the small flies. I tie right-handed, with my vise to my left. My vise is also set below my chin, so I can keep my head level while tying. I had to lower it when I got my new specs, due to neck and back fatigue.
Kirk
Kirk
- letumgo
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Re: magnification
I just got a new pair of bifocal glasses a couple weeks ago, and am still getting used to them. I haven't tyed with them yet so I am not sure how effective they are going to be. It still bugs me to have to tilt my head back to look at close up objects, but at least they are now in clear focus. I may buy a new pair of glasses (monofocal) just for fly tying...
Ray (letumgo)----<°))))))><
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"The world is perfect. Appreciate the details." - Dean
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"The world is perfect. Appreciate the details." - Dean
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Re: magnification
I've been using a large magnifier on a goose-neck. Works great really helps these 60 year old eyes.
Often I have been exhausted on trout streams, uncomfortable, wet, cold, brier scarred, sunburned, mosquito bitten, but never, with a fly rod in my hand have I been in a place that was less than beautiful.
My blog: http://lornce.wordpress.com/
My blog: http://lornce.wordpress.com/