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Celestron Heavy Duty Alt-Azimuth Tripod - Extendable Aluminum Tripod for Spotting Scopes, Binoculars, Cameras & Small Telescopes - Slow Motion Handles for Precise Adjustments - Perfect for Bird Watching, Astronomy & Photography
$82.46
$109.95
Safe 25%
Celestron Heavy Duty Alt-Azimuth Tripod - Extendable Aluminum Tripod for Spotting Scopes, Binoculars, Cameras & Small Telescopes - Slow Motion Handles for Precise Adjustments - Perfect for Bird Watching, Astronomy & Photography Celestron Heavy Duty Alt-Azimuth Tripod - Extendable Aluminum Tripod for Spotting Scopes, Binoculars, Cameras & Small Telescopes - Slow Motion Handles for Precise Adjustments - Perfect for Bird Watching, Astronomy & Photography Celestron Heavy Duty Alt-Azimuth Tripod - Extendable Aluminum Tripod for Spotting Scopes, Binoculars, Cameras & Small Telescopes - Slow Motion Handles for Precise Adjustments - Perfect for Bird Watching, Astronomy & Photography
Celestron Heavy Duty Alt-Azimuth Tripod - Extendable Aluminum Tripod for Spotting Scopes, Binoculars, Cameras & Small Telescopes - Slow Motion Handles for Precise Adjustments - Perfect for Bird Watching, Astronomy & Photography
Celestron Heavy Duty Alt-Azimuth Tripod - Extendable Aluminum Tripod for Spotting Scopes, Binoculars, Cameras & Small Telescopes - Slow Motion Handles for Precise Adjustments - Perfect for Bird Watching, Astronomy & Photography
Celestron Heavy Duty Alt-Azimuth Tripod - Extendable Aluminum Tripod for Spotting Scopes, Binoculars, Cameras & Small Telescopes - Slow Motion Handles for Precise Adjustments - Perfect for Bird Watching, Astronomy & Photography
Celestron Heavy Duty Alt-Azimuth Tripod - Extendable Aluminum Tripod for Spotting Scopes, Binoculars, Cameras & Small Telescopes - Slow Motion Handles for Precise Adjustments - Perfect for Bird Watching, Astronomy & Photography
$82.46
$109.95
25% Off
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Estimated Delivery: 10-15 days international
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SKU: 28873143
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Description
The Celestron Heavy-Duty Alt-Azimuth Tripod is perfect for hands-free viewing with giant binoculars or a spotting scope.The fully adjustable aluminum legs provide a minimum height of 32 inches and a maximum height of 45 inches. A center brace stabilizes the legs when the tripod is open, and a metal accessory tray in the center of the brace keeps your accessories close at hand. The alt-azimuth tripod head is made of metal and offers two control methods. For large altitude adjustments, simply move the mount to the desired position, and the friction clutch will hold it in place. For azimuth adjustments, loosen the azimuth lock to spin the mount up to 360º. Use the slow-motion control handles to make small adjustments for slow-moving targets like celestial objects drifting across the night sky or boats moving through water. Equipment is mounted on the tripod head using a standard 1/4”-20 thread mounting bolt, which slides along a slot in the mounting plate. This allows you to adjust the forward and aft position of your telescope, spotting scope, binocular mount adapter, or camera to maintain balance. This feature is especially useful for refractor telescopes and cameras with long lenses, which can become unstable if positioned too far forward.
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Returns will be accepted for up to 10 days of Customer’s receipt or tracking number on unworn items. You, as a Customer, are obliged to inform us via email before you return the item.

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Reviews
*****
Verified Buyer
5
I got this Tripod to go under an Orion Apex 90 Maksutov-Cassegrain telescope as an upgrade from the camera tripod I was previously using. It's gotten a fair amount of use since I got it and believe its a 5 star tripod for what it's built for but definitely not for everything.Pro's1 It's very solid compared to other tripods at this price point. A light breeze or nudge doesn't make you totally loose whatever you're looking at. It's heavier than my camera tripod but I don't feel wary about slapping a big telephoto or actual telescope on my DSLR when using this. That being said...2 It's surprisingly light. It's pretty much my grab and go tripod now. It's not a chore to pick the whole setup up and reposition for a different view.3 It's fine controls work well. For sky viewing or photo's at a distance having micro adjustments really help. You manhandle it to get close and then dial it in.Con's1 They use a nut and screw mechanism for the fine adjustments. So trying to track an object moving across the sky for extended viewing you will find yourself running out of fine adjustment. Then you have to twist the knobs to get everything in the center (or a little bit the other way), and then find whatever you were looking at again by manhandling the scope. This was most likely done to keep the costs down as it's cheaper and easier to do this robustly than for a worm and wheel type adjustment seen on more expensive mounts.2 Virtually no declination. This scope has a hard stop that prevents you from pointing it more than a few degrees below the horizon when orientated correctly. Now you can always take a rotary tool to the offending lip to free up some more play but as is, no "top of mountain looking down into valleys" action. Not a deal breaker but 10-15 extra degrees would have been nice as I don't like setting anything expensive on a not balanced and level mount.3 It's a bit short for some applications. This is both a pro and a con but unless you have a 90 degree star diagonal and a shorter scope (like a Maksutov-Cassegrain) looking at things near apex (or straight up and down) will have you about sitting on the ground. Even with the diagonal when I tried out a friends 60mmx700mm refractor there was a limited range of things I could look at "comfortably" .4 The cheap plastic cover that hides the side to side adjust screw has already broken off. It is just there to hide the mechanism and not worth me taking a star off. Actually this with a little glow in the dark paint made it easier for me to eyeball how much more travel I had left before I need to reset so if it hadn't broke I probably would have taken it off eventually.Overall this is a good deal if you have a compact scope with a decent star diagonal or want to strap a really beefy telephoto lens on your camera and take LONG distance photos. Not so much if you have a longer scope or need something that can track accurately over long sweeps of travel. Still it has a place in my camping kit or when I want to check out the moon or planets and don't feel the urge to drag my much larger and bulkier telescopes out. Also at this price point and with the Apex 90 I don't have a problem letting somebody I don't know handle the scope and tripod (e.g. kids the next campsite over wants to look at Jupiter). Something I can't say for some of my more expensive setups.

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