Kieron of SCS Astro sent me one of the above scopes to review. I must admit when it arrived and I opened the box I was totally bowled over.
The scope came in a fully-padded aluminium case - and this case was suspended by 8 strong springs from an outer metal frame, and the lot was in a tough cardboard box. No cries of "the collimation must have got lost in the shipping" with packing like that - other telescope manufacturers please take note.
The silky smooth 11:1 ultra-beefy focuser was a real joy to use and you could suspend a tank off that focuser with no focus creep - superb job.
So now the big question - do the 5 pieces of glass perform? The short answer is with the scope I had - no. I also believe someone else had one of these and returned it to the vendor - blast, what a huge let down.
No chromatic aberration from what I could see, covered an APS size chip with no vignetting and good uniformity, so what was wrong? Well I can't tell you what the proper optical term is for what I saw but basically I don't think it focuses too well. All the stars no matter what size or brightness are "fuzzy" there is a clear ring (halo) around a core for each star and the bright central core is also off-centre. Now I'm not sure why this is so as I got good collimation and reasonable focus numbers with CCDInspector - but the stars simply weren't good. The real shocker was looking at the star image as Robofocus brought it into best focus. As it came into focus it went through all sorts of funny shapes with lines across the star (forgot to mention there was a clear "cross" across very bright stars indicative of pinched optics). In the Sky 90 you get a big round nice uniform circle coming down to a small nice uniform circle as the Robofocus does its job.
So - after what looked like a brilliant start it was let down by the optics. Here's my guess at what's wrong.
I don't believe they've got the optical design wrong, I do know it's really tough getting the lens alignment right with short focal length low f# optics. It's a pig collimating the Sky 90 doublet - and in the Sky-Watcher we have 5 pieces of glass, not 2. My bet is that the manufacturers had not thought it through (cost wise) in that I reckon it would take a skilled person a day (at least) to optically align a 5 lens system. If the cell and the adjusters haven't been properly designed, then you'll never get there. There will be precision gaps between the lenses to sort as well as the X-Y position in plane. And did I mention there are 5 lenses?
Well that's my guess for what it's worth. What I can say is that if Sky-Watcher can sort out the optical issues then they have a most brilliant imaging product here - effectively an FSQ-106 at half price. Get the optics sorted and they have a real winner on their hands. But can it be sorted??
Greg

, disappointing indeed Greg, and given the cost, even more so.