I learn new telescope stuff everyday, I have an issue with the tools I am buying to collimate telescope, I bought a used 2" Litepipe that is supposed to be the one for my telescope, this Litepipe is made to help collimate/align the telescope mirrors, whenever I would post a photo for the experts to analyze I would get replies back asking me to do this or that so they could see what they wanted to see, I could barely see what they were asking for but could not get it to show up in a photo, I will explain it one way and then another, when my focus assembly is racked all the way in meaning it puts the eyepiece as close to the scope tube/assembly as possible(it does not stick out very far) I could see the mirror clips they all wanted to see, now one would think if I racked the focuser out(sticks out a long ways from the telescope) that I would be able to see what they were asking for but that is not the case, if I even rack it out a little I cannot see the mirror clips anymore and this is why, I did not get this concept until I thought about it, here it is, if you have a piece of paper with a hole in it maybe an inch round, if you put your eye right in front of the hole as close as you can you can see a lot in front of you, like 90 degrees to the sides, now if you start slowly backing off from the hole but keep looking thru the hole what you can see gets less and less to the point where it looks like you are looking thru a small straw, well this is how my telescope works, when ever I would rack it out I could not even see the clips myself, so I tried something, I took everything out of the focuser and stuck my eye right in the hole as deep as I could get it, I could see all the clips holding the mirror in place in the secondary mirror, then I started backing up, at just over 4' away all i could see was the secondary reflection of the secondary in the secondary mirror, the farther I moved back the less I could see of the primary mirror, now this concept I can understand, but then I understood what my issue was, my secondary mirror is not big enough to collect all the light from my primary mirror, it's like I have a 12" primary mirror instead of a 14.5" primary mirror.
OK, so what I determined from this is that my telescope was made to look at planets using high magnification, I do not use all the mirror when doing that, when not using all the mirror it is harder to see details, and it is nearly impossible to get a photo of my whole primary mirror so the experts can determine if my scope is collimated correctly.
If you got this far into this post you are likely bored out of your mind unless you have a Dobsonian telescope, but this is what I am interested in right now, I am talking to experts now and reading stuff they talk to each other about, I got this reply from one of them when I discovered something I never seen before by accident, "I suggest that you save resolving the autocollimator reflections for a later date", I put this tool in my telescope I got a couple days ago and seen 3 center marks(donuts) instead of one donut, and if I turn or twist or adjust certain things I can make all them donuts become one donut, and your collimation has to be almost perfect to see multiple donuts to make it perfect by adjusting it more even though it looks perfect with a normal collimation. :LOL:
See the faint reflection of the donut surrounding the hole in the cap, that is supposed to be perfect until you start trying to make multiple donuts into one donut, it's kinda like Jacob and dual SUs, he wants them to be adjusted PERFECT while I am good with it runs just fine.

“The difference between genius and stupidly is that genius has its limits” Albert Einstein