ScopeBuyer

Telescope Comparison

Celestron AstroMaster 114EQ vs Celestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ

Celestron

Celestron AstroMaster 114EQ

Celestron

Celestron AstroMaster 114EQ

114mmNewtonian Reflector
VS

Celestron

Celestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ

Celestron

Celestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ

114mmNewtonian Reflector

Same optics. Different mount philosophy.

First light

Celestron · 114mm · £189

The sky-learner's equatorial scope

  • 114mm newtonian reflector on a manual equatorial mount
  • Good for: Moon, planets, bright star clusters and nebulae
  • Setup includes rough polar alignment before observing — more steps than a simple alt-az
  • Mount axes feel counterintuitive at first; users find they become natural after several sessions
  • Keeps the door open for adding tracking motors and moving into astrophotography later
View Celestron AstroMaster 114EQ

Celestron · 114mm · £249

The simple alt-az visual scope

  • 114mm newtonian reflector on a simple alt-az mount
  • Good for: Moon, planets, bright open clusters
  • No alignment required — quick to set up, intuitive to move
  • Finding objects requires learning to star-hop: navigate with a finder scope and sky chart
  • 8.5kg total — manageable to carry to dark-sky sites
View Celestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ

Jump to full specs ↓

The full picture

The numbers that separate these two scopes — and what they mean at the eyepiece.

Aperture

114mmvs114mm

Equal light-gathering. Aperture won't settle this comparison — the mount, focal ratio, and observing experience are what differ.

Focal length

1000mmvs1000mm

Same focal length — identical magnification with any given eyepiece. Differences come from optical design and coatings.

Focal ratio

f/8.8vsf/8.8

Same focal ratio — the same eyepiece gives equivalent magnification and true field in both scopes.

Mount type

EquatorialvsAlt-Az

Celestron AstroMaster 114EQ's equatorial mount tracks the sky when polar-aligned. Celestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ's alt-az is simpler to set up but objects drift at high magnification.

Weight (OTA)

3.6kgvs3.6kg

Similar optical tube weight. Any portability difference between these setups comes from the mount, not the tube itself.

Optical design

Newtonian ReflectorvsNewtonian Reflector

Both are Newtonian reflectors — the same optical formula. Any performance difference comes from collimation quality, focal ratio, and eyepiece choice, not the design itself.

At the eyepiece

Both scopes · same aperture

Both are 114mm Newtonian reflectors — light gathering is identical. What you see through each depends on your eyepieces, your sky, and the steadiness of the atmosphere, not which scope you bought. Saturn's rings separate clearly from the disk; in good seeing, the Cassini Division — the dark gap between the A and B rings — is a genuine target at moderate magnification. Jupiter shows two equatorial cloud bands reliably, four Galilean moons changing position night to night. The Orion Nebula (M42) shows real nebulosity around the Trapezium, which splits into four stars at moderate magnification. The Andromeda Galaxy (M31) fills a wide-field eyepiece, the bright core distinct from the outer halo. What separates these scopes is the mount, the setup experience, and where you can use them — not what you see through them.

The real tradeoff

Both scopes are capable. The question is which one fits the way you actually observe.

The Celestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ's alt-az mount is faster to set up — no polar alignment, intuitive pointing. The Celestron AstroMaster 114EQ's equatorial mount takes longer but tracks the sky properly when polar-aligned. For quick visual sessions the alt-az is more convenient; for higher-magnification work or any astrophotography, the equatorial mount is the better tool.

The dark side

Every scope has a personality. Here’s where each one gets difficult.

Celestron

Celestron AstroMaster 114EQ

  • Mount axes feel counterintuitive at first

    An equatorial mount does not move up/down and left/right as you expect — it follows the rotation of the sky. Users consistently report that it takes several sessions before it begins to feel natural.

Celestron

Celestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ

  • Finding faint objects from a light-polluted garden is genuinely hard

    Star-hopping to a globular cluster or dim galaxy from a suburban sky requires learning. Users report a real demoralising phase in the first weeks — landing on the wrong star field, convincing yourself it's the target, then finding out later it wasn't. This improves rapidly with experience.

Which is right for you?

Two different buyers. Two different right answers.

The sky-learner's equatorial scope

Celestron · Celestron AstroMaster 114EQ

You’ll love this if…

  • You want to understand how an equatorial mount works — and you're prepared to spend a few sessions on polar alignment before it becomes second nature
  • You plan to observe from a fixed spot in the garden, where the mount can stay roughly polar-aligned between sessions
  • Astrophotography is on your radar even if you're not starting there — this mount keeps that option open with a motor drive upgrade

This will frustrate you if…

  • You find the equatorial mount's axes feel wrong — objects move in unexpected directions and polar alignment adds a step each session that takes several outings to become automatic

The simple alt-az visual scope

Celestron · Celestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ

You’ll love this if…

  • You want the fastest possible setup — no alignment, no polar alignment, just point and look
  • Learning the sky by star-hopping feels like part of the appeal, not a barrier to it
  • Portability matters — this mount is manageable to carry to a dark-sky site without a car full of equipment

This will frustrate you if…

  • You try to find faint objects from a light-polluted garden and mostly fail — users report a real demoralising phase in the first weeks of star-hopping that improves quickly but is genuinely discouraging at the start

Our verdict

Same aperture, same light-gathering, £60 price difference. The extra cost of the Celestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ buys a different mount — not better optics.

For most beginners, the Celestron AstroMaster 114EQ is the right starting point — the optics are identical and the savings are better spent on a quality eyepiece or a dark-sky trip. The Celestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ makes sense if the mount it comes with is specifically what you want to learn. If I had to choose: the Celestron AstroMaster 114EQ — same sky, less money.

Celestron AstroMaster 114EQ

View Celestron AstroMaster 114EQ

Celestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ

View Celestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ

Deep field: Full specifications

Every data point, for those who want to go further.

Full specifications

Fields highlighted in blue or amber indicate the better value for that spec. Data is manufacturer-stated and may vary.

How much can it see?

SpecCelestron AstroMaster 114EQCelestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ
Aperture

The most important spec — bigger = more light = better views

114mm114mm
Focal Length

Longer = more magnification potential

1000mm1000mm
Focal Ratio

Lower f-number = wider field of view; higher = more magnification per eyepiece

f/8.8f/8.8
Optical Design

The type of optics — each design has different strengths

Newtonian ReflectorNewtonian Reflector
Coatings

Better coatings = more light transmission through the optics

Aluminium-coated parabolic primary mirrorAluminium-coated mirror

How do you point it?

SpecCelestron AstroMaster 114EQCelestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ
Mount Type

The mechanical system that holds and moves the telescope

EquatorialAlt-Az
GoTo

Computer-controlled pointing — finds any of thousands of objects automatically

Tracking

Motor keeps objects centred as the Earth rotates — essential for astrophotography

The focuser

SpecCelestron AstroMaster 114EQCelestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ
Focuser Size

2" accepts wider eyepieces and gives better low-power views

1.25"1.25"
Focuser Type

Rack-and-pinion is standard; Crayford and dual-speed are smoother

Rack and pinionRack and pinion

Size & weight

SpecCelestron AstroMaster 114EQCelestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ
OTA Weight

Optical tube only — useful for comparing mount load capacity

3.6kg3.6kg
Total Weight

Full setup including mount — this is what you lug to the car

9.3kg8.5kg
Tube Length
510mm510mm
Tube Material
AluminiumAluminium

What's in the box?

SpecCelestron AstroMaster 114EQCelestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ
Eyepieces

Included eyepieces — more is better, but quality matters more than quantity

20mm and 10mm eyepieces25mm and 10mm eyepieces
Finder Scope

Helps you locate areas of the sky before switching to the main eyepiece

StarPointer red dot finderStarSense Explorer smartphone dock
Diagonal

Tilts the eyepiece 90° for comfortable viewing — useful on refractors

Smart features

SpecCelestron AstroMaster 114EQCelestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ
Built-in Camera

Records and stacks images automatically — no separate camera needed

App Controlled
WiFi
Battery Included

Blue highlight: Celestron AstroMaster 114EQ advantage · Amber highlight: Celestron StarSense Explorer LT 114AZ advantage · Greyed cells: equal or subjective.