How to Buy a Telescope : Binoculars Vs. Telescopes
Thursday, February 18th, 2010 at
9:16 pm
Binoculars may be the best starter telescope for you! Learn how to choose between binoculars and a telescope in this free home astronomy equipment video from a telescope designer and manufacturer. Expert: Bill Burgess Bio: Bill Burgess is the owner and founder of Burgess Optical, which is world-renowned for its custom-built telescopes and planetary eyepieces. Filmmaker: Dimitri labarge
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Tagged with: Binoculars • burgess optical • planetary eyepieces • Telescope • Telescopes


US $11.00






@bilalk428,
Hi, a question about the coating. What does it mean? The inside of a tube or what? I’m talking about a Newtonian reflector.
You would need the smallest binoculars possible, so as to not alert any outside observer towards your peeping tomfoolery.
You might be tempted to purchase stronger “giant binoculars,” but unless your neighbor is hundreds of yards away, a simple pair will do.
Hope this info helps you in your quest to observe mammaries upclose.
get vivitar 7×50 uv coated optics there great and also come with storage a pouch
lol i always wondered what the numbers ment on them so the first number is the times of magnification by the second number is the size of the lense mine are 10×42 leuplod acadia
This is a video is purporting to help those buying a telescope, yet mentions little in the way of telescopes and all of it ends up being about binoculars…
Suggestion: rename the title: “How to buy binoculars”
I understand the need to cover the subject of binoculars vs. telescopes but that is a subject all in itself.
I had to give it 2 stars for this reason.
Nikon 7×50 is the best for the money …they work well and i can see 4 of jupiters moons and tell thier movement each night..seriously they are great to start with..
For that u would need a good pair of eyes! WHich i assume u dont have soo, for get it!
hahahaha yeah
Help: I just ordered the Celestron Skymaster 15×70..could you recomend a tripod ?. I will use it mainly for sky watching. Thanks for the video.
You should choose binoculars
what would be the best thing for looking at my neigbors breasts covertly ?
“The immense Andromeda galaxy, also known as Messier 31 or simply M31, is captured in full in this new image from NASA’s Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, or WISE. The mosaic covers an area equivalent to more than 100 full moons, or five degrees across the sky. WISE used all four of its infrared detectors to capture this picture (3.4- and 4.6-micron light is colored blue; 12-micron light is green; and 22-micron light is red). Blue highlights mature stars, while yellow and red show dust heated by newborn, massive stars. Andromeda is the closest large galaxy to our Milky Way galaxy, and is located 2.5 million light-years from our sun. It is close enough for telescopes to spy the details of its ringed arms of new stars and hazy blue backbone of older stars. Also seen in the mosaic are two satellite galaxies, known as M32, located just a bit above Andromeda to the left of center, and the fuzzy blue M110, located below the center of the great spiral arms. These satellites are the largest of several that are gravitationally bound to Andromeda. The Andromeda galaxy is larger than our Milky Way and contains more stars, but the Milky Way is thought to perhaps have more mass due to its larger proportion of a mysterious substance called dark matter. Both galaxies belong to our so-called Local Group, a collection of more than 50 galaxies, most of which are tiny dwarf systems. In its quest to map the whole sky, WISE will capture the entire Local Group. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA”
#1: Bushnell Falcon 10×50 Wide Angle Binoculars (Black)
that was funny
To travel with 2m long telescope by the car, you need to take all the seats out – and then back.
"88.5 KCSN is playing: Black Horse and the Cherry Tree by KT Tunstall From the Album: Eye to the Telescope "
SPACE.com – For hot, young stars, the Orion nebula seems like the place to be, according to a stunning new image taken by a NASA telescope.
maybe