a) The good ones are quite durable. The are fairly expensive ($75 or more) and done at manufacturer
labs (not in store). Ask for the brand of AR coating such as Crizal, Caret Advantage, etc. If only costs
$25, then probably in-house cheap coating that will not last. OK to wash with water, mild soap, or
alcohol.
b) typically both
c) Polycarb is lighter and thinner (due to higher 1.59 index than 1.50 regular plastic). However polycarb
has the worst optical properties (measured as abbe value) of any commonly available lens. But not
sure what you mean by regular plastic, since these are the common materials available in some form
of plastic (with index of refraction):
- Regular Plastic (CR-31) 1.50 (very high quality optics)
- Trivex 1.54 (safety lenses with high quality optics)
- Polycarb 1.59 (safety lenses with very low quality optics)
- 1.60 plastic (good optics)
- 1.67 plastic (fair optics)
Regarding optical quality as measured in abbe value, some people with a relatively mild or moderate
Rx will not be bothered by low abbe values (poor optical quality). If you have a moderate to high plus
Rx (far-sighted), don't even touch polycarb with a 10-foot pole.