Roll troughs
For big prints from any format, but mainly 10x8", I use a DeVere 5108 floor mounted enlarger and a turret in the darkroom ceiling to take the head for big prints, up to 36x45", and send the baseboard down to the floor - I stand on a milk crate to adjust the filtration since the head computer threw a fit and I replaced the servo motors with simple finger operated knobs
The 42" wide paper I currently use is Foma, but I have worked with Ilford in the 1980s and Agfa MCC 42" rolls after that
The only easy way I know of processing really large sheets is to use shallow troughs each holding about 10 litres of sol'n with the dev' twice the dilution, so Bromophen is used at 1:5 or 1:7 - The print is allowed to carefully roll itself back up after the weights are removed from the edges - This roll is then lowered into the dev' trough and rolled from end to end, having an inland wet bench with an operator at either side is the easiest here - However, take
great great great great care to start the rolling process evenly or you will form a crescent crease which will run the entire length of the paper and stuff it up mightily and not cheaply - The greatest danger the paper roll is in is when you lift it from the solution, this must be done with great care, lift one end up and let the liquid slowly drain out, there is a lot of it and it is far too heavy for the roll of paper to handle comfortably, so be patient - It also a good idea to use as little safe light as possible when making big prints as the whole process is somewhat protracted, from the cutting from the roll to getting the print into the fixer
I have started a large print group now that I am returning to big prints - It in the APUG groups somewhere
Pixs of the processing when I have some new negs, which will be about 4 days after I buy a new car, which will be after I sell all my Hasselblad stuff including an SWC