Personally, Mick, I even found the correct sequence of pressing the buttons on the Lici difficult.

and to this day I am unsure of when to use the different probes i.e. actually recognising when a negative will not give me the correct colour balance with the "reduce to grey" filter covering the lens as with the Paterson. The manual is rather poor on this.
Once set up with the perfect print the Paterson is more intuitive and easier to use but of course can be fooled by a negative that has a predominance of one colour which the Lici can overcome by several spot readings.
Incidentally I never could get to the exact figure of .55 density when doing the neutral grey test but as Frances says "close is good enough" . In the same way, I suppose that one flickering light only on the three light "Y" is neither here nor there.
I think I am saying is that in the vast majority of negatives the Paterson will give a very acceptable print with a lot less "messing about" but yes on occasions a second or third print re-balanced by eye and experience will be required whereas correct use of the Lici will nail it first time
I think the problem with the Lici is that as an occasional colour printer, I had to re-read the manual each time and still felt unsure if I was doing things correctly whereas after a gap of several years I feel I could use the Paterson almost instantly.
It may just be a case of needing more frequent practice with the Lici to "pattern" the brain into doing the right thing. It is an analyser where I would have given my right arm for an experienced Lici user by my side whereas I managed the Paterson on my own.
It may be that if I start colour printing again I could do with an experienced user such as yourself when I hit a problem. If you have the time and no objection I'd appreciate an exchange of PMs should a problem arise.
pentaxuser