I remember when I worked in a wholesale lab back in the late 1970's early 1980's they had a B&W hand line and Ilford PQ universal was used in a replenished system. I can't remember the dilutions ( it may have been 1+9 , we kept a hand written log of the reps and film numbers) but the time was 8 mins @ 20C for all films. ( I remember it well as the timer clock chimed every minute and alarmed at the end)
It was quite normal to have a standard development time for most films. Ilfor Autophen a PQ variant of ID-11/D76 was Ilford's commercial B&W D&P developer released around 1957, the recommended development time of films was 8 mins in tanks, 6 mins in photofinishing machines. Autophen was available as a Powder or Liquid, packaged as a powder in up to 4x 54 ltres (working solution) packs, and Liquid 22.5 litres (5 gallon) concentrated solution.
I don't know when Autophen went out of production but by the early 70's there were very few (if any) large scale B&W photofinishing lines left in the UK as most labs had switched to colour. I never saw Autophen on the shelves of my Ilford professional dealer but that was mid 70's however I never came across the name Autophen until quite recently although I'd seen the formula in Jacobson's Developing in the late 1960's while at school, it's listed as The Axford Kendal PQ Fine Grain Developer.
Remembering how detailed the Suprol datasheet was on commercial film processing it would make sense that PQ Universal could be used in a similar way, I do have a PQ Universal data=sheet from about 1980 but it recommends using ID-11 for films apart from technical films, line, ortho etc. However it suggests 1+9 for tray processing normal films, but no times are given.
Ian