Hi Gabriele,
Sorry for the delay in replying, I've just noticed your question!
The sensor temperature was -10 degrees C. The cooler will take it down a *lot* lower than that (I could probably have run as low as -30 that night), but it was my first go with the camera.
The telescope was a William Optics FLT98 apo refractor with an AFR-IV flattener/reducer, so native F6.3 reduced to F5. The filters were Baader Planetarium LRGB.
Haven't had much chance to do any astronomy since then, as work and weather interfered with anything fun, but a couple of weeks ago, I took my first narrowband image. Again it was of the Crab Nebula so, so since it makes a nice comparison, I've attached an excerpt from a picture that is a single frame exposure through a Hydrogen-Alpha filter, no darks, flats or bias frames applied. The cooler was also set to -10 degrees, but the exposure time was ten minutes. I think that the combination of long exposure time through a filter that chops out most of the light, and with the camera set to only moderate cooling should make the thermal noise effects more noticeable. To me, it looks really good in terms of noise levels, and remember, it's an unstacked single frame!
If you've any other questions, let me know.