Matt, Greg;
Some don't believe, some do. It is best then that right now the data come from another source than me.
Here are some comments though. I was just looking at my old fixer/was tests alluded to above. They were run in 2004 and kept in a cool dark place since then. Basically, it took about a year to two years for the paper to begin to show a problem. Now, most of the underwashed results are dark brown or yellow.
Now, how to determine the best and worst conditions? It is not by the dye test. That does not tell you anything about the removal rate of hypo and Silver complexes from the coating or support (FB in this case). In fact, Kodak and several authors warn that baryta papers can retain hypo very tenaciously and actually resist washing. Wash rate also varies with volume of the wash tank and with the nature of the water supply. See the Kodak data guide I posted for the differences.
That is why all of my tests are done using the Sodium Sulfide test for retained Silver (either bad fixation OR wash) and also by using the Silver Nitrate retained hypo test. These give immediate indication of a problem, but the real result shows up only after a year or more. So, I heartily endorse using ANY wash condition that yields a "good" test with the two tests recommended. If you vary the wash, then the results WILL change. I have found that heavily aerated water will decrease wash rate at my "normal" flow rate, just by formation of bubbles on the surface of film and paper. That is why I use the Jobo washer noted above as my preferred wash method for film. It breaks the formation of bubbles on the films surface.
And, just washing 1 print or 10 prints in an 8x10 tray will change the rate of wash. For example, 8x10 prints and 5x7 prints do not wash at the same rate at the same flow rate in an 8x10 tray. The 8x10 prints will be constrained to stack, even with agitation by interleaving. The 5x7 prints will separate and drift adding to the exposure to fresh water and adding some agitation effects. However, going to 20 prints of either size in the same tray will change the 5x7 by quite a bit regarding wash rate. Try it sometime! So, the size of the tray vs print size, the number of prints, the rate of interleaving... All of this is involved. With running water, I have observed that the overall immersion / change time for a print is different than for the still method, and the number of prints used becomes a huge variable between the two methods. Simple thought experiments will help in the logic of this before you go into the lab.
There are so many factors involved that it is difficult to state. I could give a full course in this subject alone. I could write a book, believe me! And, as the guy here with a blix and a fix on sale right now (RA-RT blix first made in 1966. and TF-5, first made about 5 years ago), I can probably say that I am the only poster here with verified products on sale with a long history of sales and quality with good suggestions for processing included with them obtained by tests such as you are suggesting.
PE