I believe that scope comes on only a CG-4 mount. With the added drive it would be very marginal in my opinion for deep sky work. That scope is about f/10 so a very long tube with lots of leverage. Even a slight touch of the tube by a light wind would create problems.
For a beginner I'd recommend a faster scope such as one of the many ED 80 short tube refractors out there. They can do an excellent job with nebula and are far easier to mount. A CG-4 might be sufficient. Still you'd be pressing things.
For nebula the mount is FAR more important than the scope. There is no such thing as too good of a mount when it comes to deep sky work. Even a rather poor scope can do great work on a good mount but no scope can do anything on a rather poor mount. For an example of what an ED80 type refractor can do see:
http://www.bautforum.com/astrophotog...8-h-alpha.html
This is a recently posted shot of a very faint nebula, far fainter than any you are likely thinking of imaging. Note though he's using a CG-5 mount, one big step up to carry the much shorter tube scope.
As to nebula filters they will alter the color balance of things. Emission nebula though should come through fairly well. Still, unless you are in a very light polluted sky I find it better to use far more sub frames than a nebula filter. For most skies they aren't needed. I have a friend who images from "downtown" Berlin and he gave up with nebula filters finding 45 5 minute exposures or more a far better solution. I've never used them but I don't live under such skies.
Note that unless you replace the IR filter it will block most of the hydrogen alpha light from nebula but will pass Hydrogen Beta and OIII thus greatly increasing exposure time and turning many emmision nebula very blue green compared to the normal pink seen in photographs. This though is close to the eye's color vision so in that sense more "real". The eye is very insensitive to Halpha light. Nebula filters usually try to isolate the Hbeta and OIII lines as well. Some pass Halpha well too some don't. But with Halpha mostly blocked by either type of filter (or both) exposure time is greatly increased since the majority of the light of most emission nebula (not planetaries however) is H-alpha light. Planetary, reflection and SNR nebula wouldn't be hurt much however by the standard IR blocking filter nor are star clusters or just Milky Way starfield shots.
Rick