Smoke.
I like film because you can open the shutter and get some sleep, then come back in 3or 4 hours to close the shutter. The max shutter time on my digital is 30 sec. I know some folks have found a way around this issue by stacking the digital frames in post process. However, my digital has no way of tripping the shutter every 30 seconds except manually.
Digital: Set the camera to 30 second exposure, with a wide lens, 1600 ISO, f/4 (just for starting) I use a 14mm Rokinon and on a crop camera, that's not going to get points of light, well maybe, but it's at the limits. Full frame you're fine. I also have an 8mm but there's light fall off and color aberrations. Suggestion, set camera to Incandescent for a nice blue sky.
Lock the shutter with cable release. The camera will take a 30 second exposure, as soon as it's finished, it will take another 30 second exposure, until the card fills or the battery dies. Must be set to multiple images, not single [ ] , at least for mine I need to do that to have it continuous.
In effect you now have an exposure, every 30 seconds.
Combine with:
https://startrails.de/ free
I start mine after dark, but often it's still too light and I get up shortly after Sunrise and it's too light. Throw out anything that's not dark night sky or the lighter frames will overwhelm the dark ones. There are also suitable pairs and single frames, but since this is about trails,...
Below is two frames.
I like the idea of film and the 4x5" sounds like good fun.
Oh and yes, I use old 10-D or 20-D and I made one setup with a 40-D that I picked up at an auction, cheap.
The 8mm and 14mm are a little more complicated for the heaters. They are wound with #38 enamel coated copper wire. Length depends on the diameter of the lens. I started with one that was 58mm for an old kit lens, then wound these two. The project was to have 12V camera power, so the heaters are also 12V.
I wanted to be able to walk in to a dark sky site and set up, shoot all night, and pick up the camera in the morning. No AC in the woods. Eventually I found that I'd either need a larger battery pack or two small ones. The cameras are powered by 12V continuous adapter in a grip with one standard battery.
Now I'm working on shorter heater wires on the filters, that run on 7.4V so they can share the output. A 12V heater (calculated length) on 7.4V doesn't keep the dew off the center of a 14mm lens. So eventually still 12V power, buck converter to 7.4V and in my long term, maybe a solar powered camera. But that's complicated because of needing a pretty large solar panel. Not very stealth?
Good clear night and Perseids is my goal. Testing 12V portable above.
Longer lens works as well.