Rick - those are very nice images! I'm sure you'll come to appreciate the wide field and nice color the D700 provides. To add to what DT has said, I'd use some other, more reliable, way to focus. It's real easy to make yourself a Bahtinov mask (
http://astrojargon.net/MaskGen.aspx) that, when using live view zoomed in, will take all of the guess work out of it. Actually, the live view is one of the things that makes the D700 such a good astrocam. That and the low noise (you can bump your ISO up to 800 will little to no impact at those short exposures - easily cleaned up with darks or in-camera Long Exposure Noise Reduction {which doubles your exposure time just so you know}). As for polar alignment - again, with live view that's pretty easy to achieve. There are many methods, two of which involve different approaches. The first involves a long exposure with tracking turned off (
http://www.astrophotoinsight.com/node/568). There are a lot of folks out there who like that method (I never quite got the hang of it though). The second (and probably most popular) is the drift alignment method. Lots of different flavors of this one, but using live view through ImagesPlus it's easy enough to do (
http://www.petesastrophotography.com...alignment.html). Both the improved focusing and getting polar alignment will allow you to really put your new IDAS filter to it's best use! Good luck!