Forum Discussion
13 Replies
- GdetrailerExplorer III
Grit dog wrote:
Like to actually look through? A glare screen? No thanks.
Are you trying to block the glare of driving into the sun in general, or the glare off your hood?
Sun= vehicle visor, ball cap, and a good pair of glasses. If it's the hood, I'd wrap it matte color before using some as seen on tv screen to look thru.
Yeah, I suspect that the OP IS wanting to know if one of "these" polarized as seen on TV gadgets really work..
The yellow tint and polarization would drive me nuts and I would be concerned with the polarization messing with vision of some objects like LED traffic lights and LED/LCD TRAFFIC SIGNS..
I don't want ANYTHING that could possibly cause interference with seeing important traffic signs, traffic lights or heck even brake lights of the vehicle in front of me.. Polarized lenses do have the potential of blocking things that you just might find important to see. - Grit_dogTrailblazerLike to actually look through? A glare screen? No thanks.
Are you trying to block the glare of driving into the sun in general, or the glare off your hood?
Sun= vehicle visor, ball cap, and a good pair of glasses. If it's the hood, I'd wrap it matte color before using some as seen on tv screen to look thru. - GdetrailerExplorer III
Charlie D. wrote:
Gdetrailer wrote:
"As seen on TV"
A tag line that just OOOOZES "quality".. NOT.
NO NO NO But wait. You get a second one free, just pay additional postage and handling.
Ahh yess, the "hook" to "reel in" all the "fish"..
Make em feel like they got such a bargain just like the buyer stole it.
Marketing 101 folks, they do a very good job at it too, reminds me of the old west "traveling medicine shows".. - Charlie_D_Explorer
Gdetrailer wrote:
"As seen on TV"
A tag line that just OOOOZES "quality".. NOT.
NO NO NO But wait. You get a second one free, just pay additional postage and handling. - navegatorExplorerIf you want a really good glare shield, go to a pilots and aircraft store and look at what they have, a little expensive but they do the job, the over hang and hood on ower "C" are painted a flat or mate white and that reduces a lot of glare, I wanted to paint the hood flat black, wife would not have it, as some older aircraft had.
navegator - GdetrailerExplorer III
Art Davis wrote:
Just noticed a tv ad for an antiglare visor that clips on the the existing visor. Has anyone had experience with these? Do they work?
"As seen on TV"
A tag line that just OOOOZES "quality".. NOT.
Back in 97 I had a truck which had a second smaller plastic visor (solid not see through) built in behind the main visor.
Allowed me to move the main visor to the side and drop the smaller visor to reduce the amount of open windshield. made a huge difference in driving by reducing the amount of glare from all the extra unneeded windshield. Most times the windshields are way too tall, allows considerably more light in at you during the day in bright sun.
Used that nearly all the time.. Wished vehicle manufacturers would add that in instead of all the techno garbage that is glitchy, doesn't work or takes your attention away from driving.
I would save your money, pretty much very little huckstered in TV infomercials works as advertised or is of any quality or value.
I would suggest just dropping the visor to cover some of the extra windshield at the top but not too much as to block overhead signal lights. - jplante4Explorer II
Redcatcher70 wrote:
iplante4, what are you doing driving around looking at a screen or tablet?
Waze and Copilot RV. - Boon_DockerExplorer IIIIf it is the Tac Visor you are looking at don't waste your money. Over 50% of the reviews are a 1 star rating.
- fred42Explorer
jplante4 wrote:
... The problem with polarized is that it may filter out the screen on the GPS or tablet.
jplante4, you are correct.
I have a 7" rear camera screen and an RVI TPMS screen that is an Android. The Android is designed with an anti-glare axis that works with polarized sun glasses when it is horizontal as RVI has you install it. The Rear camera screen however, unfortunately used a universal screen designed for vertical placement but the product must be installed horizontally. I am working with the manufacturer to correct this. All a manufacturer has to do is pick the correct anti-glare axis to use. You can see in the two photos below how it looks with my glasses turned different ways:
Polarized glasses as you wear them, Rear view bad, RVI good.
Polarized glasses turned sideways, Rear view good but RVI Android starts to look bad.
- Redcatcher70Exploreriplante4, what are you doing driving around looking at a screen or tablet?
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