Hi, Thanks for your reply...
I found that, indeed, one wants to use the fastest possible F-stop for extended background region pickup. But that induces significant coma and chromatic aberration (actually a failure of simultaneous focus in R,G,B) on a Canon EOS 6D with the Canon 200 mm F:2.8 lens. But when I stop it back to the point of pristine images all the way across the plate, I reach F:8. That's great for stars, but picks up almost zero background for any reasonable integration periods.
So I found that I could grab the extended background at F:2.8, remove the stars from that image, and then add back the stars from an F:8 exposure. The results look terrific!
However, it is a bit difficult to create a repeatable workflow. Every time I pair up a F:2.8 stack with an F:8 stack, I end up with slightly different results in background coloration, contrast, and depth. So I'm trying to find a formulaic method of making valid combinations for mosaic creation. (Repeatability is probably an issue for everyone, not just for this kind of combination work)