Seestar S30 Pro is here and we have astrophotos to share

Posted on Wednesday, January 7, 2026 by RICHARD HARRIS, Executive Editor

Anyone else love the classic rock sound of the band Journey? As a musician and singer myself, in my opinion, Steve Perry and his vocals on Don't Stop Believing are just plain incredible, and for a long time they felt untouchable. Then there is Deen Castronovo. Most people know him as Journeys drummer, but fewer have actually heard him sing. The first time you do, it stops you in your tracks. The tone is there. The range is there. The power is there. What really makes you shake your head is realizing he is doing all of that while keeping time behind the kit, live, night after night. Singing those high notes, holding long phrases, and never missing a beat. It feels like it should not be possible, yet there it is, happening right in front of you. If you have not heard it for yourself, check out the video of Don't Stop Believing, listen and be prepared to be amazed.

That same feeling is what kept creeping in while using the new Seestar S30 Pro. It seems to ignore the usual tradeoffs we have come to accept in astrophotography. Size versus performance. Automation versus control. Convenience versus image quality. The S30 Pro just keeps going, capturing deep sky objects one after the other, stacking, tracking, focusing, and processing, without any sign of strain. It does all of this quietly, consistently, and without demanding attention. It simply works.

Just two days before the end of 2025, ZWO officially released the much anticipated Seestar S30 Pro - in a sort of "first BANG of 2026!" firework. For months, the question floating around the community was simple. What would ZWO change, and how far would they take the idea of a smart telescope? The answer is clear. This is not a small update or a checklist refresh. The S30 Pro pushes smart telescopes into territory that was once reserved for small dedicated imaging rigs, all inside a compact, self contained system that can image through the night on its own.

I have spent decades under the stars with telescopes of every size, and I own more than my share of high end glass. Because of that background, I did not approach the S30 Pro with skepticism. I was excited to see how the IMX585 and IMX586 sensors would perform alongside the automation built into this system. I already run a dedicated imaging rig based on the IMX585, so I know exactly what that sensor can do when it is treated properly. The real question was whether ZWO could deliver that level of performance inside a fully integrated, travel friendly platform - and ahem "OSC" system (One-Shot-Color) system.

ZWO sent me an S30 Pro at the beginning of December 2025, after about a month of real use, the answer was clear. I was not disappointed. The S30 Pro does not feel like a compromise or a shortcut. It feels deliberate. I tossed it in my luggage on a recent trip, set it up under dark skies, and started imaging deep sky objects over Table Rock Lake in Branson with ease. No heavy mount. No counterweights. No laptop balanced on a table. Just a compact system doing exactly what it was designed to do.

The first night out, it slewed to the Andromeda Galaxy, locked focus, plate solved, and began stacking exposures without hesitation. I watched dust lanes emerge on my phone while I stood there looking out at the sky through a balcony window - yes, the Seestar took a photo of M31, perched on top a foot rest, whilst pointed outside a window! The same experience repeated itself with the Orion Nebula, the Moon, and wide field views of the Milky Way. The IMX585 behaved exactly as expected. Clean data, predictable performance, and results that held up under scrutiny. The automation stayed out of the way and let the hardware do its job.

Much like watching a drummer sing challenging lead vocals without missing a beat, the Seestar S30 Pro keeps doing things that feel like they should be harder than they are. It does not break a sweat. It just keeps time, hits the notes, and delivers the performance.

What struck me most was not just the convenience, but the consistency. The IMX585 behaved exactly as I expected it to. Clean data, predictable performance, and results that held up under scrutiny. The automation never felt like a shortcut. It felt like the natural evolution of a hobby that has always been about extending human vision. If this is where beginner astrophotography is heading, and if manufacturers like ZWO continue to push in this direction, then the future of observing and imaging the night sky looks very promising indeed.

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