I have four different setups, all using INDI/Ekos, depending on what I'm targeting, and I'll swap imaging trains--Atik 414EX + ZWO EFW for narrowband, and ZWO ASI071MC for color. For wide-field, I use a 200mm Pentax/Takumar f/4 or a Nikon 180 f/2.8 lens. Most targets are somewhere in the middle, and so I do most of my imaging with the William Optics GT81 or ZS61, and for smaller/faraway objects (or moon/planetary) I use an Astro-Tech 6" f/9 RC. I have two EQ mounts, an Orion Atlas EQ-G and iOptron CEM25P.
My latest tinkering has been focused on mounting the Pi and battery on the scope so there are no cables to run anywhere. So far, with some daylight testing this all works flawlessly, but I don't think I'll be able to get away with piling on more batteries (especially with the more portable iOptron mount) so I can run the gear through the night with dew control and TEC on the Atik or ZWO cameras. The Orion Atlas would be fine with this, but I've been using it less over the last year.
I have also been working on a way to make it easy to setup my stuff on a semi-permanent "pier" I have in the backyard--see pics, and the tripod, so that I don't have to change anything if I'm shooting away from the house. I have my iOptron mount on a pier adapter that's bolted to a 1/2" aluminum plate that lines up with the aluminum plates on the pier and tripod. For the last year or so I've been able to set the fully loaded mount--scope and weights already balanced--on the pier, tighten things down, and I'm ready to go. (I live in New Hampshire, in a town with very few streetlights, and the light pollution isn't bad--my backyard is about Bortle 4, SQM: 20.62 mag/arcsec. I mainly travel with the gear in order to get better views of the low southern sky, but darker skies are always a plus).
Pictures:
My astro work space: