I am aware, Rudeofus, that this may come as a fly in the ointment for this long running thread, but it is sort of getting omitted that if you are to use bleach after color developer, there should be a serious wash in between. The combination used in C41 kits like Unicolor where film is plunged directly from color developer into blix is only possible when there is a thiosulfate present, which effectively inactivates traces of color developer carried over in film emulsion. Even if there is an acid stop, it is not enough to remove all of those traces. If those traces react with a bleach component that is an oxidizer, a heavy color fog results. So, a blix was a somewhat elegant solution for this problem. Previously, other processing sequences included an intermediate acid fixer after color developer, then a wash and then a ferricyanide bleach. A Fuji E6 included a separate pre-bleach, with the purpose of destroying the color developer traces. Consequently, your goal of avoiding an incomplete bleach-fixing could be facilitated by using a stop-fixing step (half-strength common acid fixer) directly after color developer, followed by a brief wash and then the blix, included in a kit. IMO, the standard solution offered by Unicolor kits (developer-blix, no wash in between) is a valid one, as long as one does not get too greedy.