👓 Clip On, Shine On! Transform your eyewear game effortlessly.
The Besgoods Yellow Night Vision Polarized Clip-on Flip up Metal Clip Sunglasses are designed for the modern professional who values both style and functionality. With UV400 lens technology that blocks harmful rays, a durable metal clip for secure attachment, and a lightweight design for easy use, these sunglasses are perfect for driving, sports, and outdoor activities. Plus, they come with a hassle-free warranty for added confidence in your purchase.
G**K
Just about ok
The clip is fiddly. my old ones did a better job as anti-glare and as a night vision
T**G
True stay-up flip ups for reducing oncoming headlight glare
I'd like to give this more stars, but it's a bit to clunky for total comfort when flipped up.PRO - the true flip up feature is essential. I need to choice to raise or lower, this works great for that. The tint is good enough to reduce the glare of most HID or pick up truck headlights, and not too dark that it reduces night vision. Fits well beyond the size of my prescription glasses, a bit of overlap is good.CON - when flipped up, they feel a bit clunky and you are fully aware that there is something hanging off your forehead, HOWEVER, they do the job, if you are ok with looking a bit dorky
V**L
Damages your spectacles glasses
Not useful.Leaves marks on the primary spectacles.
A**U
An All-too Thorough Review: Besgood's Careview Clip-On
First off, the brand name is Careview, and it's less expensive if you search for that first. All in all, this is a cheap alternative to not being able to see anything in your lane while headlights are blinding you, and it might even be handy in the workplace when those intense cheap indoor bulbs start burning into a migraine. It makes things easier on the eyes, and that's about it.On my end, I'm no longer blinded by headlights at night (I haven't used them in any normal day weather yet), and yes, all whitish objects now become a rich yellow. No, it does not brighten your vision or remove glare. It doesn't advertise anti-glare anywhere on the product. From my observation, it tints, and your eyes don't have to work as hard because there is no adjusting from retina-blasting white to gentler-on-eyes yellow. It does not change the color of important road signs or lights to any extent that you can't see them in time. Anything bright you can see just as well with the glasses. Again, all it does is tint things with yellow; white-to-light whitish to yellow; dark blue to dark bluish-green. Reds are still red, yellows are still yellow. You can still see all street lights and road signs in their colors as easily. If anything, colors seem richer but not brighter.No Anti-Glare: Such glasses are affordable because of this but as a result have ghostly reflections AT NIGHT from every headlight, lamp, street sign, you name it. If your prescription glasses are coated with anti-glare, you will need to get used to these ghostly reflections swooping across your vision constantly, just above the source. I found them startling and heavily distracting at first. I'm now heavily considering a prescription pair instead, but this will hold me over while I decide over such an expensive leap.Overcast Snowy Days:My first recent experience was extremely positive and surprising. I didn't expect to believe people who said these were handy in overcast snowy driving, but it's true. I was in my car, waiting for it to warm up to get home safe, and a thin blanket of flurries had accumulated. Donning the glasses on a lark, I was shocked that I could see past the flurries extremely well to the scenery beyond. Driving, I noticed my windshield had fogged up, but I could still see beyond perfectly well. Flipping the glasses up, I couldn't explain to myself why this was, as things didn't seem to change, save for there now being bluish white snow instead of yellow-tinted, yet somehow details of cars and trees became far more obvious. Without the foggy windshield, things were even better. One merely curious thing to note is how yellow specific windows on people's cars were. It's just a curious unintentional sight, but one I found odd enough to mention, as their windows weren't tinted when this was noticed. If you see this too, not to worry, you're not crazy. ;)Brand Comparison:I bought this Careview product first and then went to buy another pair at the local Bed Bath & Beyond ("Turn Night into Bright," As Seen on TV" $10) to compare. The Careview version sold here on Amazon is superior for what it offers, and I returned the other after just trying it on in the parking lot. Careview's arrived in bubblewrap though, compared to the Bed Bath version in a very sturdy box, but Careview's came with a cleaning cloth big enough to wrap your glasses in, a drawstring baggy and a polarization testing card. Bed Bath's came in a plastic reclosable bag. Careview's test card works, and the shining rag is nice, but I keep it in my old glasses case to avoid real damage. Careview's looks delicate compared to Bed Bath's version, thinner plastic, but it is far lighter, flexible, and the clip-on is metal and sturdy, despite being lighter. Bed Bath's version's clip on feels cheap. Worse, Bed Bath's version swivels all over my glasses, but Careview's clips on smoothly and strongly with the rubber tips. That said, the cold clip-on will be touching your face most of the time and makes you feel like hair is hanging in your face but looks no sillier than the Bed Bath version. I've since dismantled and redesigned Careview's to be magnetic, since I've no desire to remove them until I'm home and will be removing the clip-on anyway.The Claims:I've read speculation from fearful people that say it actually impairs your vision. I've read the comments that thank them for saving them ten bucks. They might be right, might be wrong. I took a minor financial leap by actually making my own decision after a test. I saw those image comparisons on some boxes where night on one side, the photo is dark and murky, but then suddenly BLASTS INTO GOLDEN LIGHT VISIBILITY ON THE OTHER IMAGE!! Holy wow! Why doesn't NASA know about this?!Yeah, it's a flat-out lie. I've corrected photos professionally and know that it takes five seconds in PhotoShop and a handoff to the boss to get that ad looking like it sells something even the army would love to have in its budget.The Careview product does not make this claim. Oddly enough, that other "As Seen on TV" Bed Bath brand of this product was horribly sub-par compared to the Careview version in every way. The claims may warn us away from yellow-tint glasses, but from my experiences above, they're an asset for folks who are worse off with bluish or intense white light.Three Stars:So why the three stars? Well, the clip-on is still a terrible design for any brand that uses it, a cross-eye distraction, and for a product that is used for night driving by so many people, the glare ghosting is a big distracting issue while on the road as well. It's very useful, but I think the design still has a ways to go, and if it were perfect, I for one would gladly pay the extra for anti-glare and improved clip comfort.
H**N
Great for night driving
Since I’ve gotten older (62) night driving blinds me as cars are coming at me. These yellow glasses snaps onto my prescription glasses and I can drive at night with no more problems with cars coming at me! I recently bought another pair a friend that was having the same issues as me🌞
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 weeks ago