For what it's worth, I support Steve's suggestions.
Pre Exposure works nicely in daylight.
Shooting at night, I wonder what to use as a light source. Adding more gear is not good, adding a distracting step is not good. The best nightscapes I ever did were all in dark areas shooting into the brighter ones. Knowing a couple policemen who were fond of large format photography was handy as well. It's always nice to have help carrying gear, not to mention the ... company.
In my younger days, I used a Leica on a Tiltall tripod at night. It made a handy negotiating device on a couple occassions.
SLIMT is a fine technique, but demands some practise to gain the expertise needed to get repeatable results. It is, I think, overkill for night shooting.
Steve's methods are straightforward, and are no more than an evolution of technique most of us already have. Careful selection of fim, film developer, paper, and paper developer can give you a system that requires few fancy steps.
Kodak TMY has very attractive reciprocity failure characteristics. With XTOL or Paterson FX 39, you get full speed and an extremely long straight line that doesn't block highlights. With a good fiber paper, like Ilford MG, you can record a 12 stop range on normal contrast with a soft developer like Selectol Soft.
Here is an example of a straight Tri X neg in Rodinal ( 1+50 with reduced agitation ) following a path similar to Steve's. The JPG is a straight scan from a straight print on Ilford FBMG. The neg is holding a 14 stop scale, and printing all of it.
And TMY is MUCH better for this sort of thing.
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