I tried stacking the images myself with the Deep Space Stacker program and this is what I came up with.
Now THATS what I'm talkin about! Tons better! Thats sweet!
I might play with it a little but I doubt I'll improve on that. I might try and see if I can keep the central region from over saturating. You had some excellent detail in there I think got clipped. I also remembered I used to use the other program called "Neat Image" to remove some of the noise. I'll see if it helps at all.
Now, you might have notice that your images had a radial brightening toward the center? I think thats what flats would help you remove. The good news is, if you want to try that later, you can create pretty good ones any time. Take you scope and camera out in the morning or evening. Set it up like you were going to image. Take a white t-shirt or similar and stretch it across the front of the scope and point the scope and a cloudless, evenly illuminated area and take about 10 frames at the same iso and duration as you did your light frames. Stack and use that master flat frame to calibrate your original data and that should give you an even illumination across the frame. Then you are only dealing with the targets data not that intruduced by the optical system.
Great work. Now you just need to start webcaming.
Clear Skies,
Wab