Mr. Bill - most of that prior testing, along with very precisely calibrated equipment, was in relation to technical tweaks to color printing. For example, making well matched color separation negs along with any necessary masks, can be quite fussy. And of course, if nothing else, acquiring careful work habits and making it second nature transfers over into all kinds of darkroom tasks and photo skills in general. But basic black and white shooting and printing isn't anywhere near as fussy.
It does help to have a bigger tool kit (both literally and conceptually), along with more precise equipment, and to have mastered all that to a degree which becomes almost intuitive rather than taxing on the mind. In fact, I find methodology like the revered Zone System so elementary it they can be reduced to a few sentences. It's not precise enough for me personally; but I don't think about any of that kind of thing when out shooting. Just a quick meter read and the rest is
intuitive based on experience.
But there are just so many projects where I see people overthinking it all, when in fact they might get to first base faster just by allowing themselves to have some fun in the darkroom. Some practitioners really enjoy the technical side of things, others the esthetic side, and some, both. I've known great scientists and optical engineers who worked with multi-million dollar lab project budgets (or even multi-billion), but who couldn't themselves take a picture worth a damn, let alone make a compelling print.