Are the EagleEyes different from regular polarizing sunglasses that everyone seems to make? I'm not sure what the big advantage is. Have you compared EagleEyes with other polarizing sunglasses? If so, what is the difference?
Yes, I did compare them to several cheaper polarized, some average priced shooting, and a couple of expensive fishing sunglasses (don't know about other hightech glasses like Oakley's above - too expensive to just try). My writeup above is my personal experience and pure rapture, not their commercial ad.
The EagleEyes have a much stronger polarization filter - no doubt to me. That's because they have several film layers for that.
Also most of the competitors have a simple color filter layer (grey, yellow, orange, red) which just dims the image gradually. The EagleEyes seem to have an optical design with several narrow bands of the sun light filtered specifically (aka
interference filter). So, the image is not dim, but vivid instead, because those bands of solar spectrum, which are usually blended with blue and almost indistinguishable to naked eyes (many green tones for example), are standing out.
I also strongly support their claim for water/oils repelling coatings. I never had a problem with salt water splashes blocking my vision while on route to a dive site, drops are running away instantly. No fogging after diving when skin and hair are wet. Oily fingerprints dissolves into small drops, which are not blurring vision much.
They are claiming a NASA technology behind their optical design. But I'm not sure they are licensing it or something. It's just precise physics that works. So, perhaps some other companies can do the same.