sorry - i was thinking of an uncalibrated dark; its true that the levels in a master bias will be >> a calibrated master dark.
so yeah, probably there's no difference between your old and new calibration frames.
anyway, for comparison, with my STT-8300M, the mean bias level is around 950ADU and the mean signal in an uncalibrated 1800s dark is around 988ADU. in an uncalibrated 600s B frame (using an f/5.5 telescope in a bortle red zone) the background ADU is around 6900ADU (min around 6200ADU). so assuming perfect dark scaling of 0.33, the mean backround would be around 5940 after bias/dark calibration.
i can't really analyze your images as they've been flat calibrated so it's hard to be sure what the min value was just based on the sky. however the background ADU counts are in the ~180 range for the R frame and ~200 for the L frame. not that there's anything wrong with that - as long as you didn't clip any pixels during calibration then in theory you're good - but i think it probably means you could expose longer. those low-value pixels are prone to clipping when you stretch, which i think accounts for the weird histogram readout behavior.
are your lights super-short?
rob