Testing
Testing and adjusting the autofocus on my enlarger I noticed that my Paterson Minor and Major focuscopes did not agree. I got a Peak 111 and that didn't agree with either. I picked up a Focoblitz which focuses the image onto a sensor and then displays it on a small cathode ray tube - great as you don't have to do contortions as you do when using an eyepiece with the head at the top of its column. Expensive, though. This didn't agree with any of them either. So I put the enlarger head at the top of the column and printed the centre of a grainy negative onto 5x7 paper at maximum aperture with the focus set to show the grain according to each of the 4 grain focussers. The focoblitz was easily the most accurate, as well as the most expensive, showing sharpest grain. Whether the inaccuracy of the others matters when you have closed down a stop or two I have not tested; probably not. Certainly I relied on the Paterson Minor with non-autofocus enlargers and also for setting up a Focomat V35 (which has perfect auto-focus) for 30 years, and never felt there was a problem. It was only when I acquired a Durst DA 900 with non-original lenses last year, and tinkered with the autofocus set-up that I realised that grain focussers are not super-accurate.
PS Tim Rudman in his book says he does not think using spare paper under the focus-scope makes any difference