Farpoint introduces the latest manufacturing batch of its renowned Universal Binocular Mount (Parallelogram), offering bincular astronomy enthusiasts a better stargazing experience. Proudly made in the USA, their products come with no tariff surcharges or surprise duties, ensuring a smooth delivery process for our customers.
The Universal Binocular Mount (UBM) is an essential tool for stargazers and birdwatchers alike, providing stability and ease of use for binoculars up to 12 pounds. The package includes Farpoint’s universal binocular mount, a tripod adapter compatible with tripods featuring a 3/8?-16 mounting screw, and two 5-lb counterweights to ensure secure and balanced mounting. With a total weight of just 16.4 lbs, including counterweights, this mount is both sturdy and portable.
The Parallelogram's design allows for a collapsed length of 35 inches, extending to a full length of approximately 51 inches, offering both convenience in transportation and versatility in use. This innovative mount provides users the ability to observe celestial wonders without the discomfort of neck strain. The counterbalance system ensures that your binoculars remain stable and perfectly aligned, enhancing your viewing experience.
At Farpoint, they take pride in our commitment to American manufacturing. Each component of the Universal Binocular Mount is produced domestically, ensuring the highest quality standards and supporting local industries. Our customers can enjoy peace of mind knowing there are no additional costs in the form of tariffs or duties.
With their latest manufacturing run complete and plenty of units ready to ship, now is the perfect time to invest in a Farpoint Universal Binocular Mount (Parallelogram) and elevate your stargazing experience. Visit our website to learn more about this incredible product and secure yours today. See the link below.
When people first think of amateur astronomy, they often picture telescopes - gleaming tubes on heavy mounts, capable of pulling in galaxies millions of light-years away. And while telescopes are powerful tools, many seasoned stargazers quietly admit a surprising truth: some of the most breathtaking nights under the stars happen with nothing more than a good pair of binoculars.
Telescopes excel at magnifying individual objects, but their narrow fields of view can feel like looking at the sky through a keyhole. Binoculars, by contrast, let you take in wide swaths of the heavens at once. Instead of isolating one target, you see constellations and clusters in context - Orion not just as the famous nebula, but as a complete celestial figure rising in winter skies. This sense of scale and connectedness is deeply satisfying, giving you the sky as a living whole rather than as separate pieces.
A big part of why binoculars can be so spectacular is how effortless they make observing. There’s no polar alignment, no counterweights, no cables to untangle. You simply walk outside, lift them to your eyes, and you’re instantly immersed in the universe. That simplicity means you’re far more likely to observe often, turning astronomy from an occasional production into a regular, almost meditative habit.
Binoculars engage both eyes, which makes stargazing feel more natural and immersive. There’s less eye strain compared to peering through a single telescope eyepiece, and the brain processes the scene in stereo, giving depth and vibrancy to the view. A star cluster like the Pleiades becomes not just a handful of blue diamonds, but an entire glittering cloud of suns that seems to float in three dimensions.
If telescopes are microscopes for the sky, binoculars are like wide-angle cameras. Nothing demonstrates this better than sweeping along the Milky Way. Through binoculars, the galaxy isn’t an abstract stripe overhead - it’s a river of stars, mottled with dark nebulae and studded with clusters. The Lagoon and Trifid Nebulae, the Sagittarius Star Cloud, and countless other treasures reveal themselves in a single, glowing panorama.
High-quality binoculars cost a fraction of even a modest telescope setup, yet they open the door to hundreds of celestial objects. Star clusters, nebulae, galaxies, double stars, even the moons of Jupiter - all become accessible. And because they’re versatile, binoculars double as daytime companions for birding, hiking, or sports, making them one of the most practical astronomy investments you can make.
In the end, telescopes and binoculars serve different purposes. But when it comes to experience - to feeling like you’re truly swimming in the stars - binoculars often win. They remind us that astronomy isn’t only about chasing faint fuzzies at high magnification. It’s also about context, ease, and joy. Sometimes, the most spectacular view isn’t the closest one, but the widest.
Address:
1855 S Ingram Mill Rd
STE# 201
Springfield, Mo 65804
Phone: 1-844-277-3386
Fax: 417-429-2935
E-Mail: hello@scopetrader.com