I see several have mentioned DIafine, which I had started typing a post recommending last night but never finished.
I've been using it a decent bit lately. Not only has it been sort of a new "toy" for me to play with(as I'd not used it before starting to develop film again a few weeks ago) but I'm also seriously backlogged on B&W after not developing anything since 2020...the initial attraction to me is that i can toss whatever I want in the tank(even if it's 3 or 4 different film stocks) and get results, and I've come to even like the results with some film. I use to do that with stand Rodinal also, but there's something attractive about not needing an hour when you're getting through a bunch of film.
In any case, I can't offer a TON of relevant data, as I have developed 35mm HP-5+ in it, but know I shot it at box speed. I've also developed 35mm and 120 Tr-X in it, and have tested the 120 most extensively-the roll I shot was in my Pentax 645N and was shot intending to develop in diafine, so I did a lot of bracketing and also depended on its fairly trustworthy/accurate TTL meter. It also edge prints exposure data, so it doesn't have to rely on my notes/memory for what's what. Tri-X(fresh, 2026 ex.) for me gave WAY too dense of negatives for my liking at box speed. BTW, for all of these, I set the camera to 400, and sued exposure compensation to make adjustments. EI800 gave me a negative that was a lot more workable(less dense) but fairly flat. If wet printing(which I hope to do again someday, but not anytime soon probably), I'd not be surprised if the EI 400 took a really long exposure and ended up being printed at grade 5 or 6, where EI 800 probably would have printed at grade 4 or maybe even 3(and for reference, I tend to prefer a lower contrast print, and even an objectively "good" negative I'll often end up at grade 1 or 0 for my liking). EI 1600 gave me negatives a bit on the thin side, but very useable, and with more normal contrast. I think they would have printed decent. I did not test beyond there, but IMO the best negatives were around EI 1200, although they were a bit flat still.
The Diafine datasheet posted above is a good reference point, but I'd still suggest testing for yourself. I have no idea how old it is, but given the number of long-gone film stocks still on there, and that as I understand it the Tri-X of today is not the same as the Tri-X of even 20 years ago, it's worth checking. It makes sense to me intuitively that "thick" emulsion films should develop more in Diafine than "thin" ones given that it relies on carry-over of solution A to solution B. By the data sheet, Super-XX, a stereotypical thick emulsion film, is listed with a 2-stop increase in EI(800 vs. 200), where Tri-X they only give 1 2/3 stop, and a lot of other films are anyhwere from 1/2 stop to 1.5 stops over box speed.
Of course all of this presents a quandry for the OP, given that Tri-X is no longer available in sheets and HP5+ is only stated as an EI of 800. I don't currently have any TXP-320 sheets that I could even test(otherwise I would) and I've never shot HP5+ in sheets. I do have some TXP-320 in 220, but I'm not sure how inclined I am to test it in this developer or how valid my tests would be for fresh film given that the freshest I have is nearly 20 years old(even though it's always been cold-stored). With that said, I'm wondering on the DIafine datasheet if the "Tri-X Professional-120" is TXP-320, especially given that it was once available in 120(and one of the last 220 B&W films Kodak made...).
I will also caution that based on what I've seen, you need to have a pretty high tolerance for grain especially in 35mm to use Diafine, although I doubt that would be an issue in 8x10.