I absolutely recommend a pre rinse with copious amounts of water at your processing temperature, drain well before you add the developer. I've always done this since c 1973. This gets everything up to the same start temperature every time.
If you start to get staining use stop bath. You can use Kodak indicator stop, the bromocresol purple indicator in the stop doesn't stain the print.
Final rinse or stabilizer isn't required with a good final wash in a tray away from the tube for 1 minute.
Tubes get old fast if you have to wash and dry during a session.
Is washing the tanks just a good rinse or is there a solution and scrub you should use? I keep hearing people echo this about the washing and drying. I’m hoping I can find a way to make this less of an issue. I’m hoping that just owning multiple tanks that can give me a stretch of 4 or 5 prints before I need to wash and dry will help alleviate some of that jam up. I have 2 of my 11x14 drums coming, I’m thinking I get a hand full of jobo 2820 test drums which do 4x5 prints. Then I could do 4 or 5 test prints to dial in the print and then I have 2 11x14 drums that I can hopefully get the final print looking good. Then do a full wash and dry of my 4-5 test drums and the 2 11x14 drums. Then move onto the next image.
