it can drive you a little crazy!
Lith film is cheap but getting the right development time and temp is tough and the results are in no way consistent.
I have been shooting Scala 120 (I bought a bunch a while back) and sending it DR5. I then print the negative on lith film and develop in LC-1 developer. I used dilute HC-110 (dilutions 1:14 to 1:18 stock) for while but couldn't get the contrast I was after. Even with skipping the inter-positive step, there is an increase in contrast from your original.
There are alot of variables to contend with. Just keeping consistent temp. in a tray is tough. I found that normal try rocking was creating negs with inconsistent development- more density at the edges; so I created an agitation system using a window squeegee which passes over the negative without touching. However, developing times are long, between 12-18 minutes with the LC-1!
Lith film is cheap but getting the right development time and temp is tough and the results are in no way consistent.
So, it's really about your expectations. If you're happy with an image then fine but if you really want to perfect your negative, it can drive you a little crazy!
I recently discovered Medical Dupe film (for xray dupes) and it's quite exciting. See here: (there was a url link here which no longer exists)
-david