optically there will be a difference for photography. for example my sub-$500 william-optics 70ED shows a tiny bit of CA around bright stars on a DSLR. how tiny? this much (at 100%)
I believe that is Rigel. Which is a pretty bright star.
and this is the extreme corner on APS-C (with a flattener)
Note that these are 100% images with a 15MP APS-C DSLR.
So.. unless you are using a full-frame DSLR or really
really care about residual CA, then even the inexpensive Taiwan or Chinese refractors will be more than enough, to start. Check out shirox's great photos in the other thread with a Tak FS-60. Granted an FS-60 costs much more than a W-O 70mm but it still is at the $900 USD range, a far cry from the NP101 or TSA102. Notice that he is significantly over-mounted (FS-60 on a Losmandy GM8).
The advantage of getting a cheap ED refractor is that you can use it as your guide scope later on when you move up. If however you buy the end-all refractor now but skimp on the mount... down the road you will ditch the mount which would be a waste of money.
Again, if you have the luxury of not compromising on budget today, then by all means get the best. But if you (like many of us..) needs to scrimp on something, then do not "buy the best you can afford" -- buy the best mount (in absolute terms), and scrimp on the OTA.
I will also add -- being over-mounted is a great luxury. Being adequately mounted, frankly, sucks. If you are only adequately mounted, things like cable stretch and the wind will conspire to ruin some of your subs. By being significantly over-mounted, you can forget about mount issues completely, which initially will be your bigger enemy rather than the last 5% of optical performance that the Taks and TV's will give you.