Shop
This is where you can browse products in this store.
Showing 151–165 of 2485 resultsSorted by popularity
This is where you can browse products in this store.
Showing 151–165 of 2485 resultsSorted by popularity
Both paths exist. The JAKL is sold most often as a sunglasses-and-changeable-lens kit, but every JAKL order can be configured with the Wiley X PTX prescription insert at the customize-lens step — that’s a separate optical carrier that sits behind the main shield and accepts your script in single-vision, bifocal, or progressive form. The advantage of the insert architecture is that you keep the full-coverage ballistic shield outside and the prescription geometry inside, so swapping lens tints doesn’t change your Rx alignment.
The standard JAKL kit ships with three Selenite polycarbonate lenses: smoke-grey for bright-light glare reduction, clear for nighttime and indoor work, and either light-rust or vermillion depending on the colorway you select — both are mid-tone contrast lenses optimized for tree-line or low-light conditions. All three lenses meet ANSI Z87.1+ and MIL-PRF-32432 ballistic spec; you don’t lose certification when you swap.
The JAKL is the most aggressive wrap in the current Wiley X tactical line — deeper coverage at the temples, more aggressive cheek wrap, and a shield-style lens geometry that makes it the obvious pick for shooting sports, off-road, and desert work. The Saber Advanced is closer to a sport-tactical hybrid; the Saint is a balanced everyday tactical shape; the Founder is a heavier, more boxed silhouette built for show-of-force visibility. Pick the JAKL when peripheral coverage matters more than fashion.
Yes — that’s part of why the JAKL exists. The high-wrap shield and the streamlined temple geometry slide cleanly under a full-face or modular helmet without catching on the cheek pad. The frame stays seated when you reach across to your mirror. The clear lens makes the same kit ready for night riding without a separate pair of glasses.
When ordered as the prescription configuration with the PTX insert, yes — FSA and HSA both treat prescription protective eyewear as a medical device. Sunglasses-only configurations are not FSA/HSA eligible by IRS rules. The customize-lens step at checkout will tell you which configuration you’re in; the receipt automatically includes the codes your plan administrator needs.