This 17mm Astro-Tech Series 6 is a good quality medium power eyepiece with a very wide 65° field of view that will add expansive deep space vistas to your observing kit at a price only a fraction that of exotic wide field designs with a similar field of view . . .
This 8mm Astro-Tech Series 6 is a good quality medium to medium-high power eyepiece with a wide 60° field of view that you wouldn’t normally expect to find at such a very reasonable price . . .
This grey-anodized Astro-Tech 7” universal dovetail plate lets you mount short focal length optical tubes on any altazimuth or equatorial mount that uses a Vixen-style dovetail saddle. Its color matches the focuser and trim of many Astro-Tech refractors . . .
This low power wide field 2” Astro-Tech Titan Type II ED eyepiece is superb for viewing large-scale deep space objects – open clusters, nebulas, star clouds, and more – particularly with a fast focal ratio Dobsonian reflector . . .
The 6” Astro-Tech AT6M Rumak-type Maksutov-Cassegrain optical tube provides apochromatic refractor-like images at only a very small fraction of a large apo refractor’s price . . .
Temporarily out of stock; will charge and ship when available.
This forest green Astro-Tech 15” universal dovetail plate lets you mount long focal length optical tubes on any altazimuth or equatorial mount that uses a Vixen-style dovetail saddle . . .
This black-anodized Astro-Tech adapter clamps onto a Losmandy-style "D-plate" dovetail to let you mount a telescope tube ring or accessory on the dovetail . . .
This red Astro-Tech 7” universal dovetail plate adds a touch of color to your mount and lets you mount short focal length optical tubes on any altazimuth or equatorial mount that uses a Vixen-style dovetail saddle . . .
If this Astro-Tech AT80LE was just another feature-laden 80mm FPL-51 ED doublet apo refractor, it would be fairly priced. But – this scope has a genuine FPL-53 ED doublet lens system, and a 2" dielectric star diagonal, and that makes it an astronomical bargain indeed . . .
The headline about the Astro-Tech AT106 review on the cover of the September 2009 issue of Sky & Telescope said simply “A Scope Too Good To Be True . . .