I used the evscope last night for the first time at night. The scope sets up in about 5 minutes and is ready to go. When I "goto" an object the scope slews for less than a minute and places the object in the center of view then begins tracking it. The tracking is perfect. I'm still learning digital imaging (I never did it before) so I have to get used to making adjusts in gain, exposure time and brightness and contrast.
When in "enhanced" mode the gain and exposure times can not be changed (as far as I know). Brightness and contrast can be changed however. Using the Bathinov mask my focus looked fine but when looking at the images sent to my email stars look slightly out of focus. Looks like I'll have to possibly tweak collimation the next night out. Or re-check with the Bathinov mask.
The scope senses vibrations. It was slightly windy last night so when in "enhanced" mode the scope will stop stacking until the vibration stops, usually after a second or 2. It then resumes.
I think the images are fairly decent. Are they high quality? No. But they were not meant to be considering the sensor used. The scope is for viewing after all, not photography.
Unistellar is working on making video tutorials and a better technical manual as well. Videos should be available sometime in January or February. On Youtube I believe.
To be able to bring a scope out and be seeing deep sky objects in less than 5 minutes is pretty neat. You all know that with most conventional scopes there is no way that is possible, even with better EAA equipment. I do want to dip into EAA with better cameras eventually with my Celestron Nexstar 5 but for now the eVscope whets my appetite just fine.
Tom