I only mention this cause not a lot of people know this, but a competently trained opto-whatever they call them in the US can prescribe you spectacles that will cut out almost all the dazzling. Yes, obviously you can buy yellow lenses from chemists that do some good (allegedly - I think this is controversial) - but the major major point is that your prescription changes at night. I don’t know if everyone becomes more myopic (cause I dunno much about this other than the basics) but I certainly do.
I have a set of glasses for night driving and it cuts out 95% of the dazzle from oncoming lights, and there is only the slightest tint to them - basically it’s all coming from the teeny weeny change in prescription. I post this thread because, like I said, most people don’t realise this. Go and speak to your optical professional person and get somethign sorted out for night driving. Make sure it’s a night prescription not a day one. And if they don’t know about the difference, go get a competent one.
I hope this public service announcement helps y’all out!
Perhaps slightly off-topic, but does this have anything to do with eye color, as well? I have light blue eyes and I’m quite light-sensitive. Not just to broad sunlight and headlamps at night, but even in a bright overcast. The only time I feel comfortable with ambient outdoor light is on heavily-overcast days.
Cool idea, but two pairs of glasses would be expensive as fuck, even with insurance (the majority of the cost is the lenses, not fancy designer frames, just to head that off at the pass. :D). I know there are online places like Zenni who are cheap, but how would you ask for a night prescription there (or know that they know what that is)?
Why not just close one eye for the moment the other car approaches and passes you? I close my dominant eye for the 2-3 seconds when the other car is closest.
I only wear classes when driving at night at speeds at or above about 60 mph. Simple Linctus is right. My vision is about 20x35 still legal but the glare gives me trouble without glasses. I use a normal prescription and it helps a lot.