Interesting comments, seemingly plausible...
This was in fact from a Sony 814 OSC.
I blinked the images in the order acquired and see two parts of the acquisition session. The first part with 5x120 frames, followed by an axis flip, and the second part with 6 x300 frames. I do see a linear progression in the second part, but not so much in the first.
So if I integrate the first 5 frames they seem to produce a clean result. And if I integrate only the second 6 frames they show the streaks.
And so you may be correct about the need for better and wider dither. But if the hot pixels were the cause of this there would have to be a ton of hot pixels. And I do not see that. I have my share of hot pixels but they are distributed quite widely over the image and nowhere near the areal density indicated by these streaks of high density and uniformity.
I did carefully examine the old flats, and found no artifacts that could explain this. But when I blink the second set of longer exposures and magnify the blink screen, I do see what appears to be clumps of warm pixels remaining stationary as the stars drift past, and those clumps do have a relatively high areal density, compared to truly hot pixels.
So this hints to me that perhaps I should remove the 1-pixel wavelet layer from the flattened calibrated images, before registration and integration. My star images all have 2-4 pixels across them, not 1 pixel.