Accuracy Assured in Every Test
Loss of refraction is completely eliminated through the use of the Ski-optometer. The most casual examination of the trial-frame or any other instrument shows that the construction necessitates the placing of the spherical lens next to the eye with the cylinder lens outermost—a serious fault wholly overcome in the Ski-optometer.
Not only do the cylindrical lenses of the Ski-optometer set directly next to the patient’s eye, thus overcoming any possible loss of refraction, but the strong spherical lenses of the supplementary disk are set directly next to the cylinder. There is apparently but a hair’s distance between these lenses; the two disks containing the spherical lenses of the Ski-optometer likewise setting close together.
In a word, the Ski-optometer’s cylinder lenses set directly next to the patient’s eye, followed by the stronger sphericals, so that the weakest spherical or +.25 (the lens of least importance) sets farthest away. This is 3½ m/m closer than any trial-frame manufactured, however, and at least 10 m/m closer than any other instrument—another reason for implicitly relying on the Ski-optometer for uniformly accurate results.