I used the TeleTrack mount last night with a 70mm f/4.5 refractor at 20x, 27x, & 40X. It's a home-made refractor using a surplus achromat of the "Clark" configuration (A Clark uses a fairly large air-space between the elements, in this case, around 5mm. Most modern refractors are of the Fraunhofer type, which use a thin air-space. Typically a foil spacer is all that is used, but with this Clark type, a metal spacer ring is used.) that displays remarkably little uncorrected color for such a fast doublet. I used a 2" WO enhanced-aluminum diagonal for right-angle viewing. This telescope is ultimately destined to be a large finderscope on a planned large Newtonian, but in the meantime it is a nice compact RFT that is only about a foot long, and perfectly adapted to a small GoTo mount. It would also be a fine backpacking telescope coupled with a compact tripod and decent pan/tilt fluid head. The mount is a breeze to set up. After leveling, I typically use the 2-star method, and re-sync using the "PAE" function after tweaking each found object, if needed. At these low powers, though, it's only noticeable after a very long slew. I quickly knocked-off most of the Messier objects visible from my back yard location. Much of the north and northeastern sky is obstructed from that spot but the south, west, and overhead are clear. The globulars of Ophiuchus were found: M10, M12, M14, M107. M4 was in the soup but still easily visible thanks to it's huge size. Moving northward, the mount had no trouble picking up M13, and even smallish M92 was easy. M57 was plainly visible but at these low powers was very small- a novice with a low-power scope would probably not be able to pick it out of the star-field. M27 was a much more visible planetary, due to it's large size. Brocchi's Cluster (the "coat hanger") is just a delight in this type of telescope. My daughter was delighted in noticing the color contrast of the components of Alberio. M3 can sometimes be a pain in the butt due to the lack of nearby guide stars but that's no problem for a computerized mount. The occassional broken cloud cover last night really reduced visibility of many non-stellar objects, because of the reflected light pollution reducing contrast. Small apertures suffer the most in the suburban environment. I want to try this setup again at SPOC under a better sky in the not too distant future. So far I am happy with my purchase. Remember that I bought this mount initially just to mount my PST, to emulate Kurt's terrific PST tracking setup. The night-time use is a bonus.