This is no mass produced scope. Its about as hand made as they come. Not only that, it is about as perfect as they come as well. Mechanically and optically, everything is superbly designed and manufactured. Think the ultimate Bentley/Rolls Royce for telescopes and that would be about right.Airconvent wrote:Can't understand all this waiting for a telescope. What do they do? Wait for the lens to grow and mature? its totally unforgiveable for a company to make their customers wait so long for a product. In 2-3 years, new products that are better and cheaper could have appeared as is the possible case now. I think such companies deserve to lose their customers...
Each lens objective is ground, polished and checked by 1 man only. Roland Christen himself. No one else touches the lens. He is also the only one to assemble and align the lens cells. The assembly and alignment takes on average 5 hrs per cell. That is why the wait is so long.
As for losing customers.. far from it. They actually have more people sign on the wait list because of it. New products that are better do come about. AP doesn't produce the same old scopes since day 1. Their scopes have evolved also, the wait list just gets migrated over to the new scopes. So the list for the 155 gets moved to the list for the 160 when the 160 replaced the 155 etc. Imagine, the wait for the 160 is now about 7 years.
And I don't think objectives can be cheaply made either. All the new chinese 'APOs' are a good example. While it is a good value for a good scope, it does not reach APO status IMHO. There still color on very bright objects esp in/out of focus. AP, TMB, SV and a few other companies are producing APOs with no color what so ever. There have been some tests that have shown that they have acheived the CA correction not from good optic design but from increasing the f ratio. They did that by vignetting the main objective. So the 100mm f9 is closer to a 90+mm f10+.
So even though they use FPL53 which is the same material used by AP and other top tier manufacturers, the tolerances are not as tight and the design is not fine tuned. All the top optic designers have said this, its not really what the low disperion element is made from that really counts, its what its mated to that matters more.
I've rambled on enough... there was a segment in a TV show here called 'Made in America' and they showcased AP. I'll see if the link is still up if you guys are interested.
Vincent