Products reviews
Meade 90AZ-ADR Telescope$170.00 to $200.00
Tags:meade, 90az-adr, telescope, | Celestron AstroMaster 114 AZ (50 x 114mm) Telescope$120.00 to $250.00
Tags:celestron, astromaster, 114, az, 50, x, 114mm, telescope, | Celestron NexStar 130SLT (31145) (306 x 130mm) Telescope$359.00 to $450.00
Tags:celestron, nexstar, 130slt, 31145, 306, x, 130mm, telescope, |
Carson Optical SkyWatcher™ JC-1000 (100 x 60mm) Telescope

Carson's SkySeeker SkyWatcher 40-100x60 JC-1000 Tripod has precision for high-quality imaging. SkySeeker 40-100x60 deluxe aluminum toy tripod, making these quite functional toys indeed. Tripod is convenient, easy to use.
Celestron PowerSeeker 50 Telescope

A perfect beginners model and a great gift for anyone! / Includes aluminum tripod. The CELESTRON Powerseeker 50 will bring out the stargazer in each of us, and even serves the astronomical yearnings that lead us to search for heavenly bodies in nearby apartment building windows! Optical Design: Refractor Aperture: 50mm Focal Length: 600Minimize
Bushnell Sky Tour 78-9930 Telescope

Please do not throw debris into the black hole. Actually, the only rule on this guided trip is that you enjoy the view. The ultimate first telescope, our new Voyager® Sky Tour™ series gives amateur stargazers a pro-grade audio tour of the night sky. Its Illuminated Smart Mount points the way as the talking handset describes constellations and planets, and keeps you engaged with entertaining facts and mythology tidbits. Keeping pace is easy with the LED red dot finderscope. You’re an instant expert with the Sky Tour series.Minimize
Meade DS-2080ATS Telescope

Meade Digital Series telescopes bring microprocessor technology and the very latest in electromechanical design to the serious beginning or intermediate observer. Completely re-engineered and redesigned, Meade DS-2080AT telescopes provide extremely smooth motions in both altitude and azimuth, and, most importantly, include a fully integrated Autostar control system as standard equipment. Oversize bearings on both telescope axes of all models negate the imprecisions found universally, virtually without exception, on competing models.Minimize