Ian said:Bringer of bad news here.....
Firstly the idea that a CCD's life will be shortened by continious long exposures is utter rubbish. CCD sensors are the preferred sensor technology for professional astrophotography cameras which have operational lives of tens of thousands of hours per sensor. Many professional observatory cameras spend upwards of 10 hours a night imaging (30-180 minute exposure) for 200 plus days a year with zero ill effects to the sensor. Many of the cameras are used for 15-20 years between replacement.
Commercial CCD astrocameras from the likes of sBIG and CMOS cameras from Starlight eXpress etc often use the same sensors as DSLR's again with lifetimes of tens of thousands of hours. My KAF400 CCD chip based astrocamera has over 5,000 hours of imaging on it while my older TC245 has over 9,000 hours.
Pixels "dying" is caused by either manufacturing faults or mechanical issues, not by long exposure photography.
Ian
Thanks Ivan for sharing his knowledge with us. It really clear my doubt about using a DSLR for star trails. :thumbsup: