I have finally got to give my new Burgess binoviewers a decent workout after everyone has gone home and/or to bed.
I viewed Saturn mostly and Orion Neb as well. Seeing was excellent until just about 1 hour ago when the clouds started rolling in.
Binoviewing Saturn at high magnifications is just awesome. It looks huge and really looks like it is floating there in front of you. It is just

and -jawdrop- (but I don't like that graphic, it takes up too much vertical space

).
This is despite the binoviewer obviously degrading the quality of the image and introducing some aberrations. Nothing horrible, but contrast & sharpness are clearly down (transmission too, but the light
is split in two), when compared with HD ortho or televue plossl mono views. I know that is not really a fair comparison, but also compared with barlowed Panoptic. (There is also a bit of false colour when eye placement is not quite right.)
I think for the money, the Burgess BV does a surprisingly good job. There is no misalignment in the image you see but the angle at which the light exits the left and right ocular are noticably different. Still I had no trouble merging the two images at 250x power! No vignetting with the 19mm Panoptics! With these EPs however, the BV is clearly the weak link in the optical train.
As I'm not likely to upgrade the BVs for at least a year or two, I'll probably be selling the newer of the two Panoptics and get a pair of good 20+mm plossls instead.
The light polluted views of Orion Neb M42 were immersing like cyclops viewing could never be. But I did have a hard time seeing E & F stars in the trapezium, both because of light loss and because of decreased sharpness. I managed to glimpse E but not F. Both were easy for cyclops with ortho or plossl. It was a similar story with Saturn's fainter moons. Still plenty of detail on Saturn, and quite a bit easier to pick up with two eyes than one.
The Burgess BV is not perfect, but I had a look at a Saxon BV at Bintel the other week and it was an absolute shocker by comparison. Vingetting to ~40 degrees with 25mm plossls! They cost quite a bit more than the Burgess too ($US200 shipped).