Spyke
lemm.ee

I wonder how many stared without protection, and how many were scammed with fake glasses.

124

I'm going to lean more towards fake glasses (benefit of the doubt and what not)

Fake products have been really popping off on Amazon for awhile now

62
sh.itjust.works

I also noticed after using them with my actual glasses, that it warns not to use them with other optical devices

13
yuriyreply
lemmy.world

I think that’s just because wearing them over regular glasses creates a bigass gap. I tried it for a second this time around before thinking better of it.

8
lemmy.ca

Well, you could put the glasses over the eclipse thingers.... But that would just focus the light right into the eclipse lenses and probably would make them not work so well. IDK.

I'm just some guy. Not like I work with optics for a living.

My only complaint was that, during totality (I was in the path), we couldn't see anything through the eclipse thingers. That's the part I wanted to see, and.... Nothing. Do I need two sets of these? One for totality, and one for the rest of the damn time?

2
Mnemnosynereply
sh.itjust.works

You take off the glasses during totality. Only during totality is it safe to look.

3

I just fact checked this and apparently you're right.

https://news.utexas.edu/2024/04/08/25-questions-and-answers-about-the-great-north-american-eclipse/#:~:text=It's%20perfectly%20safe%20to%20look,bright%20as%20a%20full%20Moon.

And https://science.nasa.gov/eclipses/future-eclipses/eclipse-2024/safety/

"You can view the eclipse directly without proper eye protection only when the Moon completely obscures the Sun’s bright face – during the brief and spectacular period known as totality. (You’ll know it’s safe when you can no longer see any part of the Sun through eclipse glasses or a solar viewer.)"

3
Mandarbmaxreply
lemmy.world

Probably not many, the glasses are so cheap to make and so easy to tell if they aren't right.

6

When I read OP's comment I thought they were saying that people from that region of the country would be more likely to stare into the sun and then google why their eyes hurt. Maybe that just says something about me and how I feel about them.

3

Hey now. Correlation does not indicate causation.

But yes. That's the reason because of course it is.

3
Neatoreply
ttrpg.network

People misunderstanding and looking at it in partial maybe?

24

It's almost like, you stare at the sun, and it hurts your eyes regardless of whether the moon is in front of it or not.

4
lemmy.world

True story: Today I was on my college campus in California, on the quad, hoping to admire the partial eclipse today. Some enterprising young woman next to me was selling glasses for three bucks. I saw some people buy some and decided what the hell. Unfortunately the only thing she had left was some kind of monocle. I bought it anyway and enjoyed the partial eclipse. After around 10 minutes of looking on and off, I sat down to read the text on the monocle. It said it was exclusively for phone use and under no circumstances was it to be used for viewing with your eye. Saying it could cause serious damage. Thankfully no pain so far, but I hope I didn't do any kind of serious damage. I've had anxiety about it ever since. The seller said to not worry about it and it would be fine. She had no idea either. Lovely!

79

sees phone lens cover: "this is an old timey eclipse monocle".. I'm just teasing the idea of an eclipse monocle just made me giggle. I hope you're eyes are ok- it sounds like you're good?

35
neptunereply
dmv.social

I think it's more the manufacturer knows it can't cover both eyes and so tells you not to use it that way. If your eyes don't hurt, I'm sure the damage was very minimal. But what do I know.

16

Well the floaties I bought for the pool had warnings in many languages but only the one in murican got my attention: it's not a toy and it's not a floatation device. What the hell do Americans use it for if the legalese forbids everything?

Same story with people treating kinder eggs like a lethal device.

1
lemmy.world

I broke out my welding lens to look through. Worked very well. I can believe most of texas feeling the hurt since 'we' think we're immune to most health and safety warnings published forthe general public.

53
Kaydayreply
lemmy.world

Was the shade in your lens at least 12 I hope?

17
twackreply
lemmy.world

Mine too lol. I know that isn't technically enough, but we aren't talking instantaneous damage like a laser here. You need to be much more careful around stuff like that.

Regular UV radiation is a gradient, like going outside without sunblock. You're gonna burn if you are an idiot about it. Don't stare at the thing for 60 minutes straight. We looked, we saw, and then we stopped looking.

5
Sam_Bassreply
lemmy.world

Yeah i just looked at it from about 80% to the diamond ring stage. Not more than 5 minutes

4
Strykkerreply
programming.dev

I mean that is the stage most likely to cause damage, since there is a bit less light so your eyes dilate to take in more, but it is still just as intense.

1
Sam_Bassreply
lemmy.world

Hasnt changed anything on me yet. I weld often enough to be acclimated i guess

1
twackreply
lemmy.world

Yep, same here. The auto darkening set I normally use didn't really work, but I just looked through a piece of spare glass I had lying around for a passive set.

4

Yeah i think autodarks have a limited range of activation. 93mil is probably a bit out of reach

5

But that just projects a shadow of what's happening. I needed the full experience. So yes, idk what glasses people were needing, I could see the sun perfectly fine. The spots and eye-pain afterward was just a bonus feature

1
lemmy.world

My eyes hurt trying to zoom in on the pixel.

What is the scale on the x axis?

2

You reached the end