Your CCD is a Lunar and Planetary imager. Essentially a modified web cam that has been purpose built for Lunar and Planetary only images through telescopes. Try not using the UV/IR cut off filter with lunar and planetary images.
Looking at your images I can see a few issues here. Your not washing out becase of light pollution. your problem isn't sky glow. Sky Glow will be a concern for you when you start taking DSO images with your DSLR. That too is something you have to experiment with. Avoid the urge to set your ISO setting to high in order to capture the image quicker. That will only result in more noise and risk reaching the sky glow limit quicker. (aka reciprocity failure or limit in film photography)
The first image of Saturn looks like a combination of possibilities. poor seeing conditions and or poor focus. Otherwise not to bad.
Some of the others look like you need to experiment more with the camera adjustments, and focus. The exposure level set too high is one reason some of the planets look pure white(blown out), then there is one where that looks like you have the gain and saturation too high and maybe the FPS too low. Too low and your getting over exposed, yet you don't want the FPS too high. You need to adjust the gain, saturation, white balance and gamma to where it looks best with the FPS. For that it helps to experiment until you get the best looking image on your laptop before you start the image capturing process.
The moon Image just looks like it is a little out of focus.
Oh and BTW, You don't have a link showing your telescope. You have two that show the T-Ring for your camera.
I don't know how well the Olympus DSLR performs on DSO's, since I only have a Canon 350D. You might find that any DSLR will work with varying degrees of success. Usually you will read and hear that the prefered are the Canon and the Nikon. You'll have to show us some of your results with yours. Wish you luck!
Jupiter is in a low possition making observing and imaging difficult for most northern hemisphere observers. It is preferable to observe and take images when the objects are higher in the sky looking through less of the Earths atmosphere.
Check this out then follow the links at the bottom of my post
http://cs.astronomy.com/asycs/forums/t/19319.aspx
Have A Nice __________