I'm currently mentoring a young lady who has shot film for quite a while but then had it scanned. I am now introducing her to the darkroom. Today I showed her about pre-flashing whilst trying to print a very contrasty neg of hers. I've always pre-flashed without a contrast filter but she asked, "if we are printing it with a 2/12 filter shouldn't we pre-flash with a 2 1/2 filter?" I had no idea how to answer her so we tried both ways (with necessary exposure changes of course) I couldn't really see a difference but I was wondering what the brains trust in here has to say about it? I might add that I'm not a fan of pre-flashing but I know that sometimes an impossibly contrasty neg can only be printed this way. Two of my heroes, AA and Tim Rudman had very different views on pre-flashing! (AA considered it a technique of last resort)
A late reply, but I've never found the grade to matter when flashing, though I often do lith prints. I imagine flashing at grade V could be ineffective, but a test would tell you pretty quickly.
All you need to test flashing is a scrap or strip of paper with some lines drawn on it, so you could suss this out in minutes. (With lith prints, filters generally aren't used when printing). It
is an interesting question, I may try it with grades 00 and 5 and no filter next time I'm in there.
I really don't get the "don't flash with the same enlarger" discussed in the above links - flashing times are very short, it's non-image-forming exposure, so simply diffusing the negative projection will work fine. And pulling the neg is no big deal (I use a masking carrier so the damn thing is in and out 5 or 6 times for some of my prints). The real issue is being able to repeat it for an edition of prints or when dialing in a print, do the same thing each time!
Though Ansel considered it a last resort, I've found it's often very useful, but I like clouds and skies! And man, if you use variable sepia in the yellow range, flashing to the point of the faintest fog makes it easier to get all your highlights back in redevelopment. (For the Guardians of Semantics, yes I know that means "fogging" but the procedure and testing is the same as flashing).
I guess a dedicated paper flasher with data for all your papers could be cool, but seeing how testing flashing once you have a print getting dialed in takes maybe 60 seconds, it doesn't bother me. And with lith prints I find flashing is dependent upon the exposure and development that the print demands; your basic print needs to be dialed in a bit before you assess flashing time anyway.