Just out of the darkroom here after a trip away for a few days. I ran four tanks of different films in different developers at my standard times. The first two tanks worth are hanging in the dryer, and I see no difference in density or contrast between a single roll of 120 FP4+ (at 125) run in DD-X 1:4 in a 500mL metal tank and ORWO UN54 )at 100) run in Perceptol 1:1 (I ran four 135-36 rolls in a 1L metal tank, 500mL of stock Perceptol, so 125mL per roll). Some PanF+ in DD-X 1:4 and some HP5+ in R09 Spezial (Agfa Studionol) are still in the wash. Not a definitive test, not backed up by ph testing or a densitometer, but simply 35 years of developing and printing b&w film, and taking the time to dial in personal ISO and development. Feel free to disregard my anecdotal results, I am not claiming anything other than the appearance of complete development using 125mL of Perceptol per roll in my darkroom using my times. I regularly print from negatives developed just as above without any need of excessive contrast or development for normal scenes, across all the film/development combos listed above. Print times and contrast are pretty darn consistent.
I will note that the leader of the UN54 is certainly maximum black.
Edit:
Rest of the films are out of the wash and in the cabinet. The PanF+ in DD-X looks quite the same in density, as does the HP5+, tho one roll of HP5+ was shot with a Nikon 28Ti with flash on a pre-dawn walk through Chinatown in NYC, and is a touch more contrasty on many frames. Nothing that will make for huge difficulty in the printing stage should any frame make it that far. I did make one error on a 120 roll of HP5, where I did not change exposure when stepping back and included a brightly lit sidewalk in the frame of a privacy fence. Some heavy burning will be required there. Some of the PanF+ shot through a car window will need some added contrast, but those frames not exposed through extra (and dirty) glass have the same density as the UN54.
My takeaway is that, once again, testing is the key. Finding your own exposure and development regimen is the correct way to answer questions such as this.