Smith Optics Flywheel is well worth considering too as its coverage is very close in comparison, and its Chromapop lens is mega clear. It's a lighter pair of glasses that also gets a Carl Zeiss lens. Its coverage doesn’t match that of the Devour’s but it’s pretty darn good. While it offers coverage that many glasses can’t paired with a very clear lens, others at far less of a price do come very close.įor example, the Melon Optics Alleycat comes in at £140 with the optional low-light lens. With a price tag of £230, sadly, the POC Devour is a seriously hard purchase to justify. If the Devour had a downside, aside from the price, this would be it.Īs mentioned before, the Devour accommodates interchangeable lenses and it's a fairly simple task, but it requires some force to get the job done. As a result, I often had to slide them back into place. As you would expect, they were great with the Kortal but I found that the brows of the Troy Lee Designs hats often knocked the glasses down on my nose, the Flowline more so than the A3. During this test, I’ve paired the glasses with the POC Kortal Race Mips, its companion piece, the Troy Lee Designs A3, and the Troy Lee Designs Flowline SE. However, as a pair of sunglasses designed to work best with a particular helmet, comfort, and stability isn’t consistent when wearing with other lids. For the most part, anti-fog performance has been top-notch. While this lens isn’t one of the heavily vented ones, lens fog has rarely occurred, only rearing its head when wrenching up particularly slow and sweaty climbs, where there’s a big temperature differential between my face and the specs. The glasses are pretty handy when it comes to anti-fog too.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |