Gave collimation a go last. What a pain in the backside.
Took me more than 2 hours total, and it's not even properly aligned. The diagrams in the instruction manual & on the net are totally different to the actual view & it is all very confusing. To add insult to injury, the locking hex bolts on the back of the primary don't just lock the mirror position - they move it around too! So just after I'd gotten it right, then locked the hex bolts - I'd have to do more adjusting. Finally I thought I'd gotten it as close as I could so I took it outside and pointed it at Jupiter. Terrible image with the planet wobbling around like a bowl of jelly (which I attributed to warm currents inside the OTA at the time). Brought it back inside to check the collimation and surprise surprise, it's out. Will attempt to correct this later today, patience permitting.
To all of you who suggested a refractor to my wife last Christmas when she came here asking which scope to buy as a first scope for me - I thank you from the bottom of my heart. If she'd gotten me a reflector and I had to do this back then, I'm pretty sure I would have given up.