Honestly, drilling might be overkill and could weaken the shield's structure a bit. Have you tried anti-fog spray or wipes instead? Worked wonders for me—cheap, easy, and no DIY anxiety involved, haha.
Yeah, totally agree—drilling seems a bit much for something like this. Anti-fog wipes are great, used them for my safety goggles and motorcycle helmet visor too. Another quick tip: a tiny dab of dish soap rubbed in gently and buffed dry also works surprisingly well. Cheap and easy fix, plus no worries about damaging your gear...
Yeah, dish soap trick is solid, used it on bathroom mirrors too—works like a charm. Another hack: shaving cream lightly buffed in does the same thing. Super handy for quick fixes without messing up your lenses...
"Another hack: shaving cream lightly buffed in does the same thing."
I've tried the shaving cream trick myself—works surprisingly well, especially on bathroom mirrors. But honestly, for eyewear, I'm a bit cautious about residue buildup over time. A quick tip from experience: diluted rubbing alcohol (about 70%) with a microfiber cloth cleans lenses effectively without damaging coatings. Cheaper than specialized lens cleaners and evaporates quickly without streaks...just don't go overboard or you'll risk drying out plastic frames. Learned that one the hard way!
I've had decent luck with diluted dish soap myself—just a tiny drop in warm water. Cheap, effective, and gentle enough on coatings. Tried shaving cream once, but my lenses felt kinda filmy afterward...maybe I overdid it?