View the magnificent secrets of the night sky
with your own home-made telescope.

Alan Dodd

Get super-high quality at a fraction of the price!

Your first look into the night sky with an instrument-grade telescope will amaze you.

Take yourself a little time, get out of town, and find a quiet place where the city lights are dim. Point your telescope into the starry heavens and focus on the moons of Jupiter, the crazily cratered surface of the moon, and the jaw-dropping rings of Saturn.

Of course, you’ve seen the pictures in textbooks and magazines, but to see the stars and planets with your own eyes is something special. If you have children or friends to share this real-life science lesson with, it can be even better. However …

Don’t pay thousands of dollars when you can build your very own telescope yourself

What makes it sweetest of all is that you haven’t paid many hundreds, if not thousands of dollars, for an expensive scientific telescope. You made your own high-quality optical instrument at home, following step-by-step instructions that serious hobbyists have been using for years.

What a great project! You will be so proud to focus your own optical telescope into the night sky, and pick out the planets, stars and constellations like a seasoned astronomer.

Sounds difficult? It isn’t. If you are willing to put in a little time and effort, and follow some simple instructions, you can build a high-quality telescope at home using materials easily ordered by mail or over the internet. If you shop around, depending on the size of telescope you want, all the bits and pieces you need can still be had for less than a hundred dollars.

Yes, you could buy a telescope on an internet auctions site. The cheap ones are toys. The good quality instruments will start at $800.00 and run into the thousands of dollars.

You, however, will never need to pay that kind of money, thanks to a step-by-step set of instructions written by a master lens and telescope maker.

Introducing “Making Your Own Telescope”

Allan J. Thompson was a leading member of the American Amateur Astronomy Association in the 1950s and 1960s. These were classic times for scientific endeavor, and Allan Thompson lead classes in telescope-making for a number of years.

He taught students from 16 years of age, up to 70 years. They all successfully made their own high-quality reflecting telescopes using his methods, and you can too.

Making Your Own Telescope
Only $17
192 Page eBook
Buy Your Copy

His 192-page book, “Making Your Own Telescope”, details everything you need to know to make your very own high-quality optical telescope. “Making Your Own Telescope” is so popular and so easy to understand, it has been printed and re-printed 7 times.

The methods are simple to understand, and work just as well today, as when Allan Thompson first set them down.

How can I be sure that I will be able to build my own high-quality telescope at home?”

“Making Your Own Telescope” will teach you to make a “Newtonian reflecting” telescope. This instrument was first invented by Sir Isaac Newton hundreds of years ago, when technology was much simpler than it is now.

That’s good news for you because you already have better tools and materials in your home than Isaac Newton had when he invented this kind of telescope.

The Newtonian reflector has only two lenses, or mirrors. One large lens captures the light from the stars, and the smaller mirror sends the light to the eyepiece you look through.

Your job is to polish the lens blanks to the correct shape using the easy-to-follow instructions in “Making Your Own Telescope”, coat the lenses with a mirror surface and stick them in a tube.

There is literally not much more to it than that. “Making Your Own Telescope” will show you in pictures and detailed instructions how to do every step:

  • How to find, select and buy the right kind of lens blanks – a 6 inch pyrex lens is the best – easily bought over the internet
  • How to polish the lens to the perfect finish – “Making Your Own Telescope” will show you exactly how to do this
  • How to shape the lens into the exact “parabola” required to focus the image
  • How to check the shape of the lens so that your star image is as clear as possible – using a special test Mr Thompson will explain in simple but detailed terms
  • How to make the “diagonal” lens which sends the star image to your eyepiece
  • How to make the telescope tube – an simple cardboard mailer coated in varnish is a cheap, easy, long-term solution
  • How to make the internal and external tube and mirror supports – plywood will do – easy to use and inexpensive
  • How to test and align your telescope for the best viewing of the stars and planets

Here’s the bottom line …

“Stargazing” is a fascinating and rewarding hobby. Spending time with your family and friends adds to the enjoyment. But nothing can compare to the satisfaction of looking at a far-away star, planet or comet through the high-quality telescope you made yourself, at a fraction of the price of store-bought models.

It is easy to do, if you have the necessary instruction. I attempted to make one for years trying all sorts of how to guides and courses. As soon as I came across Allan Thompson’s remarkable instruction manual I wanted to buy the rights so I could make this available for other serious hobbyists and first-timers alike so you too could be shown exactly how to do it.

Take the opportunity right now to purchase “Making Your Own Telescope” today. In a few short but highly enjoyable weeks you will be the proud owner of an instrument-grade optical telescope, spending your weekends and evenings enthralled by the secrets of the night sky.

So go ahead and buy your copy for just $17

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Here's to Starry Nights,

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Alan Dodd