Upon Bob Carnie's recommendation, I have employed pre-flashing as a means of controlling contrast with lith printing.
Bob suggested to have a standard development time, say 4 minutes, and then the duration of the pre-flash determines the contrast when you stop development at 4 minutes. It's an approach that seems a lot more reproducible than regular lith printing where you snatch the print when it looks good.
I haven't done it all the way as Mr Carnie suggests, but I pre-flash when I can't get any highlight detail regardless of how much I expose the negative. I still control contrast with standard enlarger exposure time, and use pre-flash to compress the tonal scale somewhat. It works great for me, and I'm able to do it with a single enlarger.
For standard black & white printing, the approach is similar to Bob's lith printing technique. If you want your prints to look really old, preflash the paper without putting it into the easel first. It'll 'tone up' the rebate on the paper too. It looks pretty cool, actually.
- Thomas