I just finished my first four rolls in Tetenal. Freestyle has the kits available. The film was Provia. These are from first roll.
Those were shot with a Clack with an 81C warming filter and an ND2. Those scans don't do the images justice; the transparencies are beautiful. I did this roll and the second one "by the book", agitating every 15 seconds.
These are from the fourth roll.
These were taken late in the evening when the sun was playing peekaboo with the clouds, with a Bessa having a Skopar lens. The third and fourth rolls I changed the agitation to 15 to start then 5 in 10 seconds every minute, mainly because every 15 seconds was a pain in the ass and water got everywhere constantly taking the tank in and out of the bath.
Here is the bath.
Keeping the temperature correct was no problem. All the rolls came out better than I could hope; at least as good as a pro lab (except for one where I stressed the film). The colors are right where I would expect for Provia (the warming filter does it a world of good). It is obvious that the agitation isn't overly critical and the time has a pretty generous leeway, considering the time to control the timer, empty and fill the tank, etc.
The kit is pretty nice. The only challenging chemical is the Blix, which looks like a mix of iodine and red wine. You don't want to spill it on anything.
Unfortunately, the instructions are horrible. They must have hired some Chinese guy to translate from German into English. The only mention of Kodak and Fuji film and color shifts is some arcane bit about adjusting the pH, so maybe issues with the mixing water could cause color problems.
But apart from the fact that the process is really, really wet, it's pretty easy to do.