Regarding Post # 4:
Apparently, I’ve been confused for a long time. When I began darkroom enlarging in April 1987 I consulted a knowledgeable friend, Paul, from Brussels. He advised me to forego graded papers for the modern variable contrast papers. Initially, all I used was Kodak Polycontrast II as did Paul. He gave me a single printing lesson in his darkroom that year. His Kodak safelight was equipped with an OC filter, which he told me was the correct filter for VC papers. He mentioned that “in the old days” we used red safelight filters, but those were intended for orthochromatic papers that by then were falling out of favor.
I equipped my rudimentary darkroom with a complete outfit cheaply: A like-new Omega B66XL & Dichroic B color head, 50 mm f/4 EL Nikkor, Kodak safelight, two timers, trays, tongs, film tank and reels, and so forth that I had bought from a fellow who no longer did darkroom work. The entire kit was $200, a great bargain then.
When I bought my first package of Kodak paper, the instruction booklet in the box read:
“Use a Kodak OC Safelight Filter (light amber) in a suitable safelight lamp with a 15-watt bulb at least 1.2 meters (4 feet) from the paper. Minimize safelight exposure to avoid unwanted quality changes.
Be especially careful if you use other types of safelights.”
Later, I used VC papers by Ilford, Oriental, Agfa. The instructions with each indicated the same safelight information. None of these (to the best of my recollection) mentioned the use of a red filter. Eventually, I tried a package of Foma. Its instructions indicated that it required a red safelight filter, which I obtained for that paper.
Over the following decades, I acquired many books on darkroom enlarging. None of them mentioned using a red safelight for anything other than orthochromatic materials. Some commented that using a red filter with VC papers might fog them.
I consulted Kodak and Ilford information on websites and found them to be in agreement with respect to filters for VC papers. Although Kodak hasn’t made B&W papers since about 2004. Its safelight recommendations are still available.
Burred in a long string of paragraphs on page 1 in Publication K-4, October 2006, there is a comment that I hadn’t previously noted:
“For example, a red safelight filter often has less effect on photographic papers than the amber filter listed in the table. However, most workers find that they can judge print density or perform other functions better under an amber light. (So, although it is a slight compromise in protecting the paper from fogging, an amber filter improves working conditions.)”
A table of Kodak Safelight Filters and the appropriate materials for which they’re intended is given on page 2. There are 3 different red filters listed: 1, 1A, and 2. None of these are recommended for non-orthochromatic papers. I wish that Kodak had been more specific. With the information that a red filter was permissible with VC and other non-orthochromatic materials. The darkroom books that I consulted seemed to imply that modern papers MUST be used with the Kodak OC or Ilford 902 safelight filters.
https://www.kodak.com/content/products-brochures/Film/KODAK-A-Guide-to-Darkroom-Illumination-K-4.pdf
After reading Post #4, some following comments, and doing further Internet research, I think I now have a better understanding of the situation. My apologies for my misstatements of post #3.