@6:47, no head gear, no gloves, no masks and 2 air-spaced lens placed in open room!!. Thanks but no Thanks. @7:36, what can you see in daylight !! Moon may be ?
Guru H --- As an amateur astronomer for 40 years, I can assure you that with a decent telescope such as the Astrophysics 6-inch refractor you can see several planets during daylight hours.
The machines used for shaping the lenses are used in a slow rpm and a constant stream of water. The slow rpm is to ensure a very precise surface and the water is a coolant/lubricant for the abrasives . And to tell you this telescope is not for you whitout telling you it's not for you. If you placed an order the same moment you commented, you would still be on a waitinglist today.
The Andromeda Galaxy is not a tiny speck in our sky, it's four times the size of the moon, if your eyes could discern something that faint.
I still have my 1991 Astro-Physics 130 EDT Starfire. Not much chance to use it in Scotland though :(
I'm not selling my Astro-Physics refractor
Actually that's 18 employees. Not 80.
Wish I had one!
Is that Cliff from cheers?
Yes.
Well that's great, I'll just ride by there and pick one up! Ha Ha Ha.....Ha.
80 employees only?? wow!!
18
What on earth is wrong with the AUDIO???
@6:47, no head gear, no gloves, no masks and 2 air-spaced lens placed in open room!!. Thanks but no Thanks. @7:36, what can you see in daylight !! Moon may be ?
You don't think this was just done for the video?
Guru H --- As an amateur astronomer for 40 years, I can assure you that with a decent telescope such as the Astrophysics 6-inch refractor you can see several planets during daylight hours.
The machines used for shaping the lenses are used in a slow rpm and a constant stream of water.
The slow rpm is to ensure a very precise surface and the water is a coolant/lubricant for the abrasives .
And to tell you this telescope is not for you whitout telling you it's not for you.
If you placed an order the same moment you commented, you would still be on a waitinglist today.
Ha, funny you would say no thanks to a telescope that anyone who knows anything about telescopes would pretty much walk on hot coals for :).
And tomorrow my first AP telescope is going to arrive. Dreams really do come true.