Hi Blu Moon,
I also have a pair of the said binos. I won mine in an Open Night. I find them optically aok. I'm no optical mechanics expert, but I haven't had any issues when viewing clusters or the moon. Omega Centauri, Tuc47 and the clusters around Scorpio for instance look amazing thru them. But as most people said, try before you buy. They do get weighty to hold after a few mins.
What I suggest you do is to grab a pair at the shop and literally hold them say at 45-60-80 degrees and see how you go with their size and weight. If you find them too cumbersome after 30-60 seconds then maybe start with the 10X50's
Also, when you hold them, try to put your arms vertical and close to your chest as opposed to having your arms out wide like 45 degrees. This helps the weight issue.
As for a mount/tripod thats certainly an option - but remember you gets what you pay for. Cheap ones are wobbly, vibrate and a waste of time. Good ones can be expensive, but worth it.
One more thing, from memory Celestron have a lifetime warranty on that binocular, even if you accidently do something with them, ie drop them etc. Check it out to confirm!
Good luck!
PS: if the AOE are cheap and do the same job, save the bucks and go for them.