Hey Yusuf, firstly id like to say thank you for your in-depth review, covering every aspect of owning loupes. I particularly appreciate the perspective from your colleagues. I remember AMT well, the Frothy was the main source of caffeine and sugar throughout uni. Good times. I would love to invite you, Yousuf and Manu to BDHQ Surrey, and show you how these are manufactured here in the UK. We can show you our latest innovations, and fire up the Pizza oven in our staff kitchen. Ill drop you a PM. Id also love to reach out to Manu, and see how we can get them firing on all cylinders for every procedure, even if this means changing his magnification! Connor
Hey Connor 👋🏽 I hope you're keeping well I did wonder if you'd ever get to see this video but I'm glad you have and hope it was of benefit. Sure, that would be intriguing. Who can say no to pizza? And great, I'll let Manu know I'm sure he'd be happy to give it another go. BW Yusuf
Would you suggest getting these for an implant dentist? Considering switching from normal TTL Bryant loupes to help with back pain but unsure how these would work with implant surgery, cutting flaps etc
Hmm..I know some implant dentists that use refractive loupes, but I prefer direct vision for intra-oral surgery. That being said, I haven't tried refractives for a long enough period to definitively say. But stay tuned...👀
Thank you! I've been looking for information about these loupes for a long time. I'm deciding between the 5.7 or 7.2x now. What type of procedures do you do? I'm sure you get this a lot. Any help would be appreciated!
Hey, thanks for your comment. In my opinion, It depends on what you do day to day, if you do general dentistry then I think 7.2x is quite high. But if you specialise in doing certain restorative procedures or endodontics 7.2x would be great. Also, if these are (or will be) you're only pair of loupes then you'd want some versatility. In dentistry, I would do surgical third molar removals etc. And for Maxfacs then skins/soft tissues/dentoalveolar. Again, that's my opinion. Some people are happy using 7.2x for everything! Hope this helps
Would you suggest getting these for an implant dentist? Considering switching from normal TTL Bryant loupes to help with back pain but unsure how these would work with implant surgery, cutting flaps etc
I haven't tried the orascoptic ergo loupes but I'm sure the optics would be comparable. I'd go for the one that is lightest and has the more comfortable frames 😅
Hey Yusuf, firstly id like to say thank you for your in-depth review, covering every aspect of owning loupes. I particularly appreciate the perspective from your colleagues. I remember AMT well, the Frothy was the main source of caffeine and sugar throughout uni. Good times.
I would love to invite you, Yousuf and Manu to BDHQ Surrey, and show you how these are manufactured here in the UK. We can show you our latest innovations, and fire up the Pizza oven in our staff kitchen. Ill drop you a PM.
Id also love to reach out to Manu, and see how we can get them firing on all cylinders for every procedure, even if this means changing his magnification!
Connor
Hey Connor 👋🏽
I hope you're keeping well
I did wonder if you'd ever get to see this video but I'm glad you have and hope it was of benefit.
Sure, that would be intriguing. Who can say no to pizza?
And great, I'll let Manu know I'm sure he'd be happy to give it another go.
BW
Yusuf
Please drop our office a message with your contact details, it seems TH-cam stopped messages in 2022! Looking forward to speaking with you soon.
CB
You have such an amazingly soothing and calming voice. Your patients are very lucky to have you!
Awesome stuff Yusuf! Love it.
Would you suggest getting these for an implant dentist? Considering switching from normal TTL Bryant loupes to help with back pain but unsure how these would work with implant surgery, cutting flaps etc
Hmm..I know some implant dentists that use refractive loupes, but I prefer direct vision for intra-oral surgery. That being said, I haven't tried refractives for a long enough period to definitively say. But stay tuned...👀
Thank you! I've been looking for information about these loupes for a long time. I'm deciding between the 5.7 or 7.2x now. What type of procedures do you do? I'm sure you get this a lot. Any help would be appreciated!
Hey, thanks for your comment. In my opinion, It depends on what you do day to day, if you do general dentistry then I think 7.2x is quite high. But if you specialise in doing certain restorative procedures or endodontics 7.2x would be great. Also, if these are (or will be) you're only pair of loupes then you'd want some versatility.
In dentistry, I would do surgical third molar removals etc. And for Maxfacs then skins/soft tissues/dentoalveolar.
Again, that's my opinion. Some people are happy using 7.2x for everything!
Hope this helps
What mag do
You sugest in implantology
Good question, this is subjective and will vary from each operator. Purely for implants I reckons 2.5x-4x is reasonable.
Great content
Thank you
Very informative
👍🏼
Would you suggest getting these for an implant dentist? Considering switching from normal TTL Bryant loupes to help with back pain but unsure how these would work with implant surgery, cutting flaps etc
Having a demo Monday !
Awesome! Let us know how you get on😄
I am debating Orascoptic ergo loupes or Bryant refractive loupes.
Please help 😊
I haven't tried the orascoptic ergo loupes but I'm sure the optics would be comparable. I'd go for the one that is lightest and has the more comfortable frames 😅
@@dentalreviewsYT What one is that?
9 months wait is a bit insane though :C
Yes, but I do think that was due logistical issues during COVID. I very much doubt that'd be the case now
My waiting time is 3 months