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Pages in category "Telescope manufacturers" The following 59 pages are in this category, out of 59 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. ASTELCO;
In 1999, the Sky-Watcher brand was established to sell Synta Taiwan's optics, with head offices in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada.They began producing Dobsonian telescopes in 2000, followed by Maksutov–Cassegrains in 2001, and Apochromat ED-APO refracting telescopes in 2004.
The Bresser GmbH product portfolio caters to both amateur and professional users, under several specialized brands. These include the Bresser Brand itself (telescopes, microscopes, binoculars, weather stations, and photo studio equipment), Explore Scientific (telescopes and astronomy accessories), National Geographic (optical and outdoor products like binoculars, [7] telescopes and microscopes ...
This category contains articles about telescopes used for optical astronomy, as well as articles about non-optical telescopes. Subcategories. This category has the ...
Radio optical Telescope with 54 m Spherical Reflector Antenna and 2.6 m optical telescope on the same axis. One of the most sensitive and low noise antennas in the world. Operating during 1987-2010. Conserved from 2015. It is planned to revitalize it in 2020-2025 by the force of Armenian and International science-technical society.
Takahashi Seisakusho Ltd. (株式会社高橋製作所) is a Japanese manufacturer of telescopes and related equipment (such as eyepieces and equatorial mounts) founded in 1932 by Kitaro Takahashi in Tokyo. Originally started as a foundry, Takahashi began manufacturing optical equipment after WWII in 1946. [1]
By June 2002, Wind Point Partners, then the parent company of Bushnell Performance Optics purchased the Tasco brand and all the company's intellectual property. In July 2007, Wind Point Partners sold Bushnell Performance Optics along with Tasco property and sales rights to MidOcean Partners , a private equity firm based in New York and London .
Celestron was the first large scale commercial manufacturer of the Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope, introducing its "C8" 8" diameter 2032 mm focal length, ƒ10 telescope in 1970. [7] The primary innovation Celestron/Tom Johnson devised was a method to produce Schmidt corrector plates using a vacuum to pull the glass blanks into a pre-shaped curve ...