Orion SkyView Pro 127mm Mak-Cass Telescope with FREE Drive

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Orion SkyView Pro 127mm Mak-Cass Telescope with FREE Drive

Saturday, October 27th, 2007    Subscribe To Our Feed

Given the popularity of our 127mm Mak, it’s only natural that we offer it with the best new mid-size equatorial mount on the market, the SkyView Pro. It is a telescope for the enthusiast who appreciates the practicality of a compact scope, yet wants the best features and performance available. In a market flooded with “Maks for dummies,” replete with plastic parts and with gadgetry that promises more than it delivers, it’s nice to know you can still get a telescope that puts quality above all else for a terrific price. The “SVP” 127’s 5″ Maksutov-Cassegrain optics pull in plenty of light for views of deep-sky gems. And with its focal length of 1540mm, you can’t beat it for high-magnification study of the lunar surface and planets. Not bad for a tube assembly that’s just 14.5″ long. The SVP EQ mount is as fluid in its motions as it is solid in its stance. A mount worthy of the avid observer. Click To Buy…

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Record Searchlight - A telescope will be better to use because of greater magnification, a steadier support and often electronic and mechanical Dusty debris from Halley’s comet appear to radiate from the constellation Orion rising in the southeast around 10 p.m. and

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Universe Today - Now power up with a telescope and you’ll find that both stars are also visual doubles! While the companion stars to both are meteors per hour at maximum and the best activity begins before local midnight on the 20th, and reaches its best as Orion

The Orionids meteor shower peaks Sunday morning, 21 October
Science Centric - Go outside on Sunday morning, 21 October, around 1 AM, and start looking east (no telescope required). Every 10 minutes or so be seen anywhere in the sky, but they appear to stream out of a point, called the radiant, in the constellation Orion

Orion Nebula Gets New Milepost Marker
Discovery News - Oct. 11, 2007 One of the most famous and scrutinized heavenly objects is 10 to 20 percent closer than we thought, say two teams of radio astronomers who have made some of the most precise cosmic distance measurements ever, with a telescope nearly

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