Profile: Carton Optical Industries, Ltd. specializes in optical goods. Our products include stereo microscopes, biological microscopes, binoculars, magnifiers, telescopes, and optometry.
The company has revenues of USD 1-5 Million, has ~50 employees.
13 Products/Services (Click for related suppliers)
|
• Battery-Powered Keratoscope (FDA Code: HLR / 886.1350) A keratoscope is an AC-powered or battery-powered device intended to measure and evaluate the corneal curvature of the eye. Lines and circles within the keratoscope are used to observe the corneal reflex. This generic type of device includes the photokeratoscope which records corneal curvature by taking photographs of the cornea. |
• Binocular Microscope |
• Biological Microscopes |
• Low Power Binocular Loupe (FDA Code: HJH / 886.5120) A low-power binocular loupe is a device that consists of two eyepieces, each with a lens or lens system, intended for medical purposes to magnify the appearance of objects. |
• Magnifiers |
• Magnifying Spectacle (FDA Code: HOI / 886.5840) Magnifying spectacles are devices that consist of spectacle frames with convex lenses intended to be worn by a patient who has impaired vision to enlarge images. |
• Microscopes |
• Ophthalmic AC-Powered Operating Microscope and Accessories (FDA Code: HRM / 878.4700) A surgical microscope and accessories is an AC-powered device intended for use during surgery to provide a magnified view of the surgical field. |
• Ophthalmic Lens Radius Measuring Device (FDA Code: HLF / 886.1430) An ophthalmic contact lens radius measuring device is an AC-powered device that is a microscope and dial gauge intended to measure the radius of a contact lens. |
• Ophthalmic Trial Lens Clip (FDA Code: HPB / 886.1410) An ophthalmic trial lens clip is a device intended to hold prisms, spheres, cylinders, or occluders on a trial frame or spectacles for vision testing. |
• Spectacle Frame (FDA Code: HQZ / 886.5842) A spectacle frame is a device made of metal or plastic intended to hold prescription spectacle lenses worn by a patient to correct refractive errors. |
• Stereomicroscopes |
• Telescope |