Agfa recommended 2% Sodium Carbonate solution as a wash-aid right up until they ceased production of B&W papers.
Actually, this recommendation is still part of the information leaflet included with Adox MCC 110. I must say, I have not followed it, though, preferring sulfite.
Then again I may be in over my head... I'll just keep using Ilford Washaid
This subject fascinates me, and both of you might remember my (there was a url link here which no longer exists) questioning why Ilford and a few other references indicated that the capacity of the fixing bath increases when sodium sulfite wash aid is used after fixing. I am still at the stage of experimentation, and the early results are promising but not statistically solid, yet. So far, I am seeing a minor improvement in "clearing" time of a paper treated to a bath of sodium sulfite compared to the same one that did not have that bath, following fixing in a neutral pH 12% ammonium thio fixer (similar to a 1+4 concentration) that contains 2g Ag/l (exhausted), as tested with sulfide. How big is the difference? Tiny: 5 seconds. But I am also seeing that with my test papers, MGWT FB, Fomabrom Variant 111 and ADOX MCC 110 the clearing times are all very short, even in an exhausted fixer, ranging between 7-15 sec. When I have more data, I will write up something more meaningful on my original thread, but I just wanted to drop this note to say that there seems to be more to sulfite HCA than has been written so far, and not just in helping desorb thio from fibres and the emulsion. On the other hand, I am also starting to question the need for a 2-bath regime, with these papers and fixers. But that'd be another thread...