I always used a defocused star with my C11.. Collimating the SCT is a no brainer.. It usually takes between 3 and 7 minutes to go from a fairly poor alignment to spot on collimation. The trick is to get it looking right in a 40mm EP, then get it right in a 20mm ep, then in a 10mm... Once its perfect in a 10mm EP, for a camera, it will be spot on..
A note - If you plan on using the SCT for photography, then do your collimation in the same configuration.. For example, with my SCT, I used to have a moonlite focuser with the 6.3 reducer inserted inside the focuser. I would image with the camera seated squarely in the focuser with no diagonal, no other bits and pieces. So collimation is performed the same way.. Having the diagonal in for collimation is a recipe for disaster. if the diagonal is not perfectly collimated, then your scopes collimation will not be perfect... Collimate the scope for imaging, without a diagonal!
Good luck with it mate.