Update.
Finally got the highest tones under control, having them land exactly where I wanted, but lost control in the low tones. One more adjustment to the curve should do it. It's only been 14 tries...so far..........
Had enough with step tablets, so tried a print of my go-to test image that has delicate whites, subtle clouds, mid tone areas, textured shadows and a couple spots that are supposed to be max black. On a whim, tried 2% citric acid bath for 4 minutes with a 10 minute wash & dry before coating. It came out 'weird' and grainy. It was at the end of a loooong day, but I'm pretty sure I did all the steps correctly. The scan is also too purple, but I can't fix it without it looking even weirder.
Another thing is that the whites never got to 100% paper white. When I put a piece of ruby lith tape over a part of the border, there was a barely perceptible yellow-ish amber-ish tone...something like subtle plate tone on a photogravure.
Think I'll go back to Hahnemuhle Platinum Rag for a while, get myself firmly planted in the salt print realm, then try buffered watercolour papers some time in the future. No wasted effort, much was learned
The second photo shows the high tones. The goal is to get white lines on the overturned dinghy hull to show, and for threshold tones above the gunnel on the boat to the left. Very happy with this result. Things sure get twitchy at the top end!
There's a person in the foreground boat who's pants are supposed to be max black and the sweater is supposed to be a barely discernible dark grey. If the dark tones had landed lower where they should have, the print would have had some pop & sizzle. As it is, it's a dud.
Will put some Renaissance Wax on this print to see what happens and post that later.