I cant see a reason to use aperture priority for star-trail shots unless you have an illuminated subject in the foreground for which you want a proper exposure.
You can, however, use either body without battery power to shoot trails. A cable release is required for the FE2 when using B (bulb mode) on the shutter speed dial. On the F3 you can do the same cable release in bulb mode. Or you can accomplish the same (long exposure) on the F3 without a cable. The drill, after removing any filters, mounting on tripod, focusing, composing, setting aperture: 1) set power switch under film advance lever to off position, 2) close viewfinder curtain, 3) shutter speed dial set to T, 4) turn manual shutter release button (under DOF preview button) from 12 oclock position to 10 oclock ready or stand-off position, 5) using an object such as a baseball hat or equivalent and with one hand, totally obstruct the front element without touching the lens/camera, 5) trip the shutter using the manual release lever, remove hand from camera, 6) wait a half second for vibration to stop, 7) remove baseball hat from front of lens, 8) wait several hours while enjoying your beverage of choice (critical step
dont blow it), 9) obstruct front element with hat, 10) turn shutter speed dial to B or X to close shutter. Keep in mind that dew may settle on your front element so you may want to consider how to combat it.
If using a cable release, firmly secure the cable/finger plunger to the camera to keep it from swinging or being jostled by even a slight breeze.
Les, are you saying aperture priority kept the shutters open for one hour in all those cameras you listed? Whoa! I didn't think that was possible given their low-end metering range of EV 1. You didn't go overboard on my Step #8 above, now did you?