Testimonials

read all the opinions of other space enthusiasts like yourself who tried our platform

In this page you will find unbiased reviews from our users, video reviews published in popular Youtube channels, reviews from astronomy magazines, award winning pictures taken with our telescopes and post-processed by our clients, our clients’ images published in astronomy magazines, and much more!

Rated 4.7/5 on TRUSTPILOT!

REVIEWS FROM OUR CLIENTS

A great way to practice astrophotography when the weather is not so good. After trying the 1 month free trial I decided that there was more than enough value to justify the price a couple of times over. It allowed me to very quickly request images from a number of scopes, and then be able to access the data behind them and practice my post processing skills, in addition there is a lot of tutorials which I have already learnt a lot from. Highly recommended.
Amazing and cheap. I would highly recommend telescope live.Their services are cheap and high quality and with many different telescopes around the world practically everything is photographable. If you want to get into astrophotography and don't have the equipment this is a great start to learning how it all works.
YOUTUBE

REVIEWS FROM POPULAR YOUTUBE CHANNELS

video reviews

video reviews from our clients

MAGAZINE REVIEWS
/

ASTRONOMY NOW, MARCH 2021

SPECTRUM, Northern Cross Science Foundation

ASTROPHOTOGRAPHY FROM TELESCOPE LIVE
/

ASTRONOMY NOW, April 2021

The winning combination of the Local Group galaxy the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC; NGC 292) and 47 Tucanae (NGC 104), the majestic globular cluster, located in the southern constellation of Tucana, always produces an awesome vista. On 15 & 18 December 2020, and 8 January 2021, Dan Crowson used a FLI ML16200 camera attached to a 200mm, f/2 Nikon lens, part of the equipment based at Telescope Live’s facility at El Sauce Observatory, Edge-on majesty Rio Hurtado, Chile, to I’ve long considered NGC 1055 in Cetus, with its magnificent dust lane, as an unsung gem of a galaxy. Mike Selby remotely acquired shoot 155 minutes data using a RiDK 700 telescope and a FLI PL16803 CCD camera, part of the equipment available at Obstech’s Robotic Remote of LRGB data in Observatory at Observatorio El Sauce, located in the Río Hurtado Valley, Chile. Warren Keller did the post-processing. 300-second subs