Color Vision Test - Falant or Optec-900 near Chicago?

CLPSO-34

Filing Flight Plan
Joined
Aug 21, 2016
Messages
6
Display Name

Display name:
CLPSO-34
Hi,
Does anybody know of an AME or Optometrist that has a falant lantern or Optec-900 near Chicago or in the Midwest? I need to take an alternate color vision test to get a restriction lifted of my medical. If you have any suggestions, please reply to this thread.

Thanks,
Paul
 
Can you see the light guns at the airport? If so you can go that route. that is how I plan to take care of mine. AOPA had something on their website about how to go about this.
 
Peoria is in the Midwest AND near Chicago.

Dr. Bruce Chien (www.aeromedicaldoc.com) not only knows the ins and outs of a request like this, but I think he has just about every color vision testing equipment made in the modern and not so modern eras.
 
Peoria is in the Midwest AND near Chicago.

Dr. Bruce Chien (www.aeromedicaldoc.com) not only knows the ins and outs of a request like this, but I think he has just about every color vision testing equipment made in the modern and not so modern eras.


Thanks Mike - I will reach out to him tomorrow. That is very close!
 
Hi,
Does anybody know of an AME or Optometrist that has a falant lantern or Optec-900 near Chicago or in the Midwest? I need to take an alternate color vision test to get a restriction lifted of my medical. If you have any suggestions, please reply to this thread.

Thanks,
Paul
Hi,
Does anybody know of an AME or Optometrist that has a falant lantern or Optec-900 near Chicago or in the Midwest? I need to take an alternate color vision test to get a restriction lifted of my medical. If you have any suggestions, please reply to this thread.

Thanks,
Paul
Can you see the light guns at the airport? If so you can go that route. that is how I plan to take care of mine. AOPA had something on their website about how to go about this.
 
hi Paul,
I am an ophthalmologist/retina specialist in San Jose, California but I have lots of eyeMD friends in Chicago who can help you: Alice Lyons, MD at Northwestern U Med Center or Dr Jenny Lim,University of Illinois, Chair of Dept of Ophthalmology. This is my first post and I have had some pilot patients who all had questions about eye issues while flying. So I thought I would join this forum. Thanks Gloria
 
hi Paul,
I am an ophthalmologist/retina specialist in San Jose, California but I have lots of eyeMD friends in Chicago who can help you: Alice Lyons, MD at Northwestern U Med Center or Dr Jenny Lim,University of Illinois, Chair of Dept of Ophthalmology. This is my first post and I have had some pilot patients who all had questions about eye issues while flying. So I thought I would join this forum. Thanks Gloria
 
Gloria do you know anyone in the Los Angeles area that does the OPTEC-900 FALANT test?
 
Hi everyone! Hopefully I can pick up on this thread. Do you know of any eye doctors in the Philadelphia area who do the Falant/optec 900 test?
 
How about in the Northwest Florida or Alabama?
I hear they are nice places to visit.

But if your question s where can you go to have your color vision checked, just about any ophthalmologist worth his shingle should have the equipment and know how to give you a proper exam.
 
hi Paul,
I am an ophthalmologist/retina specialist in San Jose, California but I have lots of eyeMD friends in Chicago who can help you: Alice Lyons, MD at Northwestern U Med Center or Dr Jenny Lim,University of Illinois, Chair of Dept of Ophthalmology. This is my first post and I have had some pilot patients who all had questions about eye issues while flying. So I thought I would join this forum. Thanks Gloria
 
We are in a bad situation. Do you know of any doctors in the Indiana/Kentucky area that can distribute the different eye tests? Have you ever heard of anyone successfully lifting the OCVT restriction once you failed it once during the day? Family friend, 18 years old, horrible AME told him don't worry about it to work on hours. Flight instructor great but NOT KNOWLEDGABLE and told him to fill out an application for the CAMI so he could get it lifted by taking the OCVT. Was never told by anyone there were alternate tests. This was the final test, and he could have taken several others. Flight instructor sent CAMI note stating he set it all up and had no idea about alternative tests. Wondering if getting a lawyer would help?
 
We are in a bad situation. Do you know of any doctors in the Indiana/Kentucky area that can distribute the different eye tests? Have you ever heard of anyone successfully lifting the OCVT restriction once you failed it once during the day? Family friend, 18 years old, horrible AME told him don't worry about it to work on hours. Flight instructor great but NOT KNOWLEDGABLE and told him to fill out an application for the CAMI so he could get it lifted by taking the OCVT. Was never told by anyone there were alternate tests. This was the final test, and he could have taken several others. Flight instructor sent CAMI note stating he set it all up and had no idea about alternative tests. Wondering if getting a lawyer would help?

This sort of complex issue is where Dr. Bruce Chien shines. If there is a way he will walk you through it. Seriously!

www.aeromedicaldoc.com.
 
Expanding the topic slightly...For anyone with FAA medical issues in the Ohio area, I highly recommend this gentleman... http://www.ohioame.com/ He helped my wife with some affib issues on her 1st class and got them resolved in record time. He is dedicated to his pilots. In example...he has searched out and has in-hand some color-blindness tests from the 50's (still approved but easier to pass than the new ones) that have been used by folks from as far away as Texas for their vision exam. Good guy!

Jim
 
I’m hoping someone is still looking at this thread. After failing the standard color vision test on my FAA 3rd class medical, I’m trying to find someone in the Syracuse NY area who offers the FALANT or Optic 900 (or other acceptable) test options. I’d like to do these BEFORE going the last resort route of the signal gun test (which is a last resort). Thanks! Michael
 
I’m hoping someone is still looking at this thread. After failing the standard color vision test on my FAA 3rd class medical, I’m trying to find someone in the Syracuse NY area who offers the FALANT or Optic 900 (or other acceptable) test options. I’d like to do these BEFORE going the last resort route of the signal gun test (which is a last resort). Thanks! Michael
FALANT is no longer acceptable. I have a solution - PM Me
 
FALANT is no longer acceptable. I have a solution - PM Me
The farnsworth FLASHLIGHT is not acceptable but the farnsworth LANTERN , STILL is ACCEPTABLE per this month’s AME guide.

Michael, you need to do a mock OCVT and know in advance that you will pass.
 
The farnsworth FLASHLIGHT is not acceptable but the farnsworth LANTERN , STILL is ACCEPTABLE per this month’s AME guide.

Michael, you need to do a mock OCVT and know in advance that you will pass.

Curious.

Same Farnsworth (Wes Farnsworth) of the “Farnsworth Method” of learning Morse code? Or different Farnsworth?

If anyone knows, that is...

If the same guy, he sure got around.
 
Bruce is correct its the flashlight. Sorry Doc. But i agree do some practice OCVT once done you’re good for life.
 
The Farnsworth lantern was Dr. Dean Farnsworth, a US Navy doctor who developed it initially to test shipboard sailor's at the sub laboratory in Groton during WWII.
The morse code method Farnsworth was Daniel Farnsworth (W6TTB) came later (1950's).

Someone has a video of the FALANT in operation here:
 
The legal color dot tests are:
The A/O
Ishihara 14
Ishihara 24
Dvorines
Richmond HRRs
Most AMEs only have one of them. They are about $350-$500 per copy and most are not in print all the time.

You can't rely on "online displays" as you have no idea what chromatic calibration is being produced by your monitor.

NB the USAF live online computer method is slated to go online in the future- AMEs will do one of two allowable dot screening tests, and if you fail then it's to the computer. The AMEs are proposed to have to buy an $800 piece of USB equipment that will calibrate the monitor and upload the calibration and do the computer exam directly.
 
I used to work with the National Information Display Laboratory. They must have one hell of a medical industry markup on the calibrator. I think I paid under $100 for the one we used (at that was a few years back). Of course, we were using government furnished calibration software (It was written by KODAK, and with much of that group's software, was a piece of junk). But it's pretty much what the feds used to calibrate color CRTs for years. I had to modify our software (the industry leading image analysis software) to import the calibration files so we could match to the monitor.
 
Old Thread: Hello . There have been no replies in this thread for 365 days.
Content in this thread may no longer be relevant.
Perhaps it would be better to start a new thread instead.
Back
Top