so am totally lost.
See this web document, scroll down half way to see the issue you have.
I had the same problem with an Altair Astro RC8 and a QSI 683.
http://diffractionlimited.com/flat-fields-stray-light-amateur-telescopes/In my case the off axis reflections were primarily from the focuser barrel which was anodised black but remained very shiny, particularly to IR wavelengths, the distance spacers and baffles supplied with the RC8 were just as bad. To cure the problem I used high temperature matt-black barbecue paint to paint the inside of the focuser barrel, the telescope's distance spacers and the primary baffle, this cured the problem entirely.
The reason you don't see it with the other filters is because the anodised surfaces don't reflect all wavelengths equally so if the strongest reflections are not in the pass band of the filter they don't make it to the sensor.
They may have been absent from your previous camera because of the way it was coupled to the telescope, the size of the CCD chamber aperture, the baffling in the camera nose piece, the IR cut-off point of the camera's AR window etc, etc.
Take the camera off the telescope, point the telescope at a brightly lit white wall or ceiling and look critically for light glinting and reflecting off the inside of the focuser draw tube, telescope distance spacers etc then look inside the light path of the filter wheel and camera nose-piece or T2 ring back to the camera CCD aperture, are there any bright anodised surfaces showing?
In an ideal world there will be no reflections visible just a single bright aperture surrounded by a black donut.
If you do need to paint any surfaces using the high temperature black BBQ paint it comes in confusingly gloss and matt varieties, you need the matt black version, also, don't bother trying to use it sprayed, you can't get even coverage inside small tubes, instead, spray some into an empty container and then apply with a brush.
If you need to paint the inside of the focuser draw tube be careful not to paint below where the camera nose piece reaches otherwise you risk scraping the paint off each time you attach and remove the camera which will end up as dust in the optical path, consider flocking paper as an alternative.
(High temperature BBQ paint is a pigment based paint and absorbs IR strongly unlike paint containing dyes which do not absorb all wavelengths equally)
HTH
William.