We have first light!
Nothing overly fancy, the moon (at about 93%) which looked mighty fine and very bright even with a decent moon filter on it. Not really going to be using the scope for the moon so let's just leave it at that
I then did a manual slew over to Sagittarius, did a proper EZ Finder alignment on Kaus Australis (see note below) and then managed to find both M54 and M70 (M22 was unfortunately hidden behind the roof of the house). Both globulars looked fuzzy but reasonably well defined considering the amount of light pollution about.
It took about 15 minutes to assemble and about 10 minutes to disassemble. I didn't play around with the GoTo part of the scope, I just used the AutoTracking feature of the controller.
Notes:
1) Being a first time user of a dob I was a little bit surprised when I noticed 4 spikes on the bright stars I looked at. I understand this is caused from the spider holding the secondary mirror in place. Everything else looked nice and sharp considering the evening sky was trashy.
2) The initial collimation I did in the garage seemed quite spot on though I will be getting the help of some most learned friends to confirm or laugh at my n00bness next time I get to take it out.
3) The Azimuth movement when manually pushing the scope about has a loud-ish squeak so maybe some bigger teflon padding is required or maybe it'll wear in and eventually go away. It did seem easy enough to push it about, a little stiff but not hard and the whole scope felt very rigid and structurally sound.
4) The SynScan AZ Controller is good though I'm not used to having to input my location and time, the CPC9.25 does that all for me automatically, so maybe if I get some more $$$ I might grab one of the GPS units for it.
5) When slewing the scope with the controller there seems to be a half second to 1 second lag between pressing the button and the scope actually moving, again the CPC9.25 was very instant in this respects so just something to get used to I guess. The actual motors for the scope are not as loud as the CPC9.25 but they are not servo-cat quiet so I guess this scope will be heard by those nearby
Thanks for reading to my dribble.
Cheers,
Simon