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Photograph of Hedgehog magnifier
This photograph shows a âhedgehogâ magnifier being held under a fluorescent task lamp, with additional ambient light from a window.âIn practice the lampâs reflection can be reduced by better positioning.
This type of LVA (low-vision aid) is âstoodâ on the page (âthe hedgehogâ has âfeetâ which are not seen when viewed from the top), and it has an aspheric (non-spherical) curvature which reduces image distortion over a larger area than a normal lens-based magnifier does.âSome distortion is still present in this picture because I wanted to show the magnifierâs effect on a ruler and a pencil, and it was hard to hold it flat over these three-dimensional objects; itâs better when rested on a printed page.
The magnifier seems to be made from some kind of acrylic plastic.âI once dropped one at an outdoor conference venue; it bounced down a flight of steps (gradient was about 30°) and then an attendant caught it in mid-air like a ball.âThe impacts had severely limited its visual clarity (I replaced it soon after), but it more-or-less stayed in one piece.âChipping can occur with daily use; I try to keep my best one at home and use another for carrying, as some âbumpsâ are inevitable.
The Hedgehogâs magnification is advertised as 4.25x (often rounded up to 4.3), which must be an area factor rather than a scale factor (the corresponding scale factor is 2.06; perhaps the sales team preferred to quote the higher number).âItâs not mathematically possible for unpowered lenses to magnify much more than this unless the viewing area is reduced; video magnifiers can do better but they require power.âFresnel-lens âfull page magnifiersâ donât usually reach the Hedgehogâs level of magnification, and lack the ability to double-up as a âpointing aidâ for readers with gaze-tracking issues (nystagmus etc).
Scale factor 2.06 is enough to make 12-point text look like 24.7-point, and 8-point look like 16.5. (This is why I prefer to use scale factors rather than area factors: with scale factors you can calculate what it does to font sizes by simple multiplication.)
In this picture, the magnification factor is not constant because (as mentioned above) the magnifier is not being rested flat.âThe leftmost millimetre seems barely 1.3 times as long as the unmagnified ones, while the scale factor on the far right exceeds 4.3! Itâs difficult to achieve this in practice howeverânormally the reader would simply place the magnifier flat on the text and use it as designed to get a fairly constant scale factor of 2.06.
Iâm not sure why these things are called âbrightfieldâ magnifiers.âBright field microscopy involves lighting a microscope plate from behind, so that objects appear dark against a light background (field).âI suppose brightfield magnifiers are named because they tend to concentrate incident light on the area being magnified; they certainly donât require lighting from below.
The search term âbrightfield magnifierâ should retrieve some alternatives to the Hedgehog, such as the 1.7x and 2x dome magnifiers made by Schweizer, COIL (Combined Optical Industries Ltd) and MagnaBrite, which can be cheaper if you donât need the extra bit of magnification provided by the Hedgehog, or the Eschenbach stand magnifiers, which slightly exceed the Hedgehogâs magnification but can now be harder to obtain (and the last one I had tended to scratch at the base because it lacked the Hedgehogâs âfeetâ, although Iâm told Eschenbach have somehow mitigated the scratching issue since then).
The most expensive ones have built-in LED lighting and other perks, but I wouldnât want one of those to be involved in an accident!â(Note to marketers: expensive kit is less appealing when you realise itâll sometimes need replacing.âThereâs no such thing as a âone-off purchaseâ if it breaks when dropped.âInsurance is not the answer, because we all know those companies do everything they can to avoid paying up.âWe just have to stick to a price range that we wouldnât mind paying again if thereâs an incident.)
The Hedgehogâs real name is Loupes Hautes Performances (LHP) T4. (The embossed logo says T4; the Brevete SGDG mark means âpatented without government guaranteeâ and is not part of the product name.) It used to be listed by UK suppliers as âhedgehog magnifierâ or âThe Hedgehogâ, but after the LHP company ceased trading by 2015 and their brand-mark was acquired by Lesa France, Lesa didnât keep those UK suppliers stocked for long, preferring to sell it directly on their own website.
UK residents who are registered blind or partially sighted can apply to be exempted from VAT and postage costs on specialist magnifiers, but I donât know how to do this when dealing directly with a non-UK supplier.âThe last of the UK stock was generally sold at a heavy discount to clear it, although, confusingly, suppliers didnât prominently say thatâs what they were doing: it just looked like a large price difference between catalogues.âAll of this cheaper UK stock has now been exhausted, leaving Lesa as the only option.
Another magnifier by LHP, the LHP 26, has sometimes been called a âlarge Hedgehogâ as it adds about 50% more height to the viewable area with the same magnification factor.âI wouldnât call it a âtrueâ Hedgehog magnifier: it lacks the âfeetâ (the base is very nearly in contact with the page) and itâs implemented as two lenses on a right-handed stand, with a gap creating an extra surface to pick up dust.âIt has a built-in incandescent lamp but the electrics are awful: they used a 2.5mm âphoneâ type connector which is not designed for power and can short-circuit and spark; the unit I tried also had bad soldering, causing the light to flash as the magnifier is moved over the page and to fail completely after less than an hour of use, so I removed the lamp housing.âWhen used without its own lamp, the 26 blocks more external light than the T4 hedgehog does, although the difference is not so bad with a well-positioned desk lamp.âBut for portable use I wouldnât suggest the 26 unless you canât get a T4.
Iâve sometimes been asked where to buy a T4 Hedgehog in East Asia; sorry I donât know, but theyâre light to take in hand luggage.âPerhaps Lesa should open a market over there; may I suggest the Chinese name ćșçŹæŸć€§é (cĂŹwei fĂ ngdĂ jĂŹng).
I wrote this page because I sometimes get questions about the Hedgehog I use.âUsual disclaimers apply; it is not professional medical, legal, financial or electrical advice.
All material © Silas S. Brown unless otherwise stated.