Greg, we have a 16"DK up at the dark sky site (which often has excellent seeing) It performs beautifully on planetary, certainly better than any C14 I have ever looked through (and I have actually owned one with good optics)... fwiw) The difference in secondary ratios between these scopes is not that great (35% vs 40%)
I would not recommend the TEC Mak... you will no doubt find the aperture to be limiting.
As others have intimated, thermal management is everything.
The way the pro's do it is to house the telescope in an insulated enclosure
which is refrigerated during the day. Interestingly, telescope performance
is significantly less affected by having optics below ambient as compared to when they are warmer. The boundary layer tends to just slide off rather
than sending plumes up in to the OTA. When I visited the Max Planck observatory on Calar Alto (some years ago) the 3.5m was basically kept just above the anticipated dew point, or minimum night time temperature, which ever was greater... food for thought.
Two other things the pro's do that (most) amateurs don't are:
* Elevate the telescope above the ground... most of the seeing is within the first 10m or so. It's worth noting that often when potential observing sites are evaluated for seeing, they'll build an elevated platform for the small aperture test telescope.
* Secondly, (according to the professional literature) the boundary layer
can be disrupted by blowing air
horizontally across the optics at a velocity of a couple of m/s. (Wilson et al)
The fact that massive telescopes with substrates 20cm thick or greater (like at the ESO) can perform so well even with tens of tonnes of thermal mass is testament to the fact that the strategy outlined above genuinely works.
If the scope is going to be a dedicated planetary instrument, you only need a diffraction limited field of a minute of arc (or there abouts) so a simple Newtonian would actually be the best bang for the buck. Also, being as exposures are going to be no more than a fraction of a second then the highest performance per dollar will be a large aperture Newtonian on a driven, Alt Az mount in an elevated, insulated, air conditioned observatory.
2c
~c
edit}
fwiw, here's a direct image of a planet orbiting the star CVSO 30 taken with the Astralux camera on the 2.2m on Calar Alto... separation is approximately 2 arc seconds.
Obviously, they are doing something right.
image:
http://www.caha.es/images/prel/cvso30/portada.png
info:
http://www.caha.es/the-weird-system-...distances.html
best
~c