![]() If you pass any of the FAA approved tests he'll give you a letter to take to an AME or send to CAMI. Good one-stop-shop to try almost all the FAA approved tests in one sitting. I got all the tests above (except the FAA OCVT and MFT of course) done by Wayne Verdon at the Optometry School at the University of California, Berkeley. ![]() test, D-15, Ishihara, Dvorine, AOC 1965 plates, Hardy-Rand-Rittler (HRR). Richmond (1983 edition): 8 errors, 7 allowedįarnsworth Lantern test: 15 errors on 18 pairs of lights, 3 allowedįarnsworth D-15 arrangement test (not an FAA approved test): 1st attempt: 7 major errors, 2nd attempt: 8 major errors and 1 single place errorĪnomaloscope (not an FAA approved test): The Rayleigh match on the Neitz anomaloscope showed a match range of 0 to 73 units, with a yellow setting of 8 at 73. Performing non-invasive tests which typically can not be found in general eye. Ishihara 24 plate Edition, plates 1-15: 13 errors, 7 allowedĭvorine pseudoisochromatic plates 1-15: 12 errors, 7 allowedĪOC Revised pseudoisochromatic plates (1965 edition), plates 1-15: 8 errors, 7 allowed Hardy-Rand-Rittler Pseudoisochromatic Plates (4th Edition Richmond-HRR) plates 5-24: 12 errors, 2 allowed Hardy-Rand-Rittler Pseudoisochromatic Plates (2nd Edition AOC-HRR), plates 7-11: 2 errors, 0 allowed ![]() ![]() But there are different types of colorblindness, so YMMV. ![]()
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