![]() ![]() The best advice on foul weather days is, once one with a dry face puts goggles on in a car or lodge, NEVER take them off lest wetness mist and flakes land and absorb on facial skin and then evaporate fogging inner lens surfaces. Just like with my expensive photography lenses or eyeglasses, I usually blow moist breath on a surface and then use a microfiber cloth. Voted 1 anti-fog on the market Lens cleaner and anti-fog treatment in one Works for all lenses, eyewear, goggles, helmet visors, binoculars, etc. It is trivial having to eventually replace cheap models that eventually scratch up. So yeah, the inner surfaces minus an anti-fog coating are more likely to fog up, but at least I can readily make them clear. Instead buy cheap goggles and carry ordinary Kleenex tissue packets that readily soak up moisture and or optical microfiber cloths with which I use on both inner and outer surfaces. CAT CRAP 10808B Light-Green Spray Anti-Fog Lens Cleaner - 1 oz Spray-Bottle Our Part : SGP209955 Manufacture Part : 10808B Our Price: 7.54 Price Per Each Bulk Shop & Save 12 - 23 7.39 ea. EK USA, Cat Crap Multi-Use Anti-Fog Spray, for any Optics, Coatings, Eyeglass Lens Cleaner, Spray On - 1 Ounce Bottle. Note have never owned expensive models with fans. Below link is one that does not, (have not personally used) but suggests simply dabbing the inner lens surface: Personally, long ago I decided not touching goggle inner lens surfaces was a useless limitation because most times I've been in riming cloud fog or wet drizzly conditions, goggles have picked up wetness/ice on them that needed to be removed. (Like really, that is supposed to work?) Most state any liquid will remove the inner anti-fog coating. If you Google search on "ski goggle cleaning", you will receive several hits with most relating to not clean a goggle inner lens but rather shake off whatever. ![]()
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