Hi Casey
I've always printed both B&W using a color head. Since I was printing both color & B&W it made more sense to have one enlarger for both. I recently was doing a paper test for a photographer and I got this really weird test results. Now he had just bought a Durst 4x5 enlarger with a color head and not being used to his new enlarger he forgot to put the filters back in so all the tests from 130Y to 130M were quite similar. Now Durst being really good enlargers I was hoping it was pilot error and not something wrong with his enlarger as he had just bought it. Luckily it was his error.
Printing with a color head gives you very precise control of contrast. You might want to calibrate you color head. In the article I wrote on Adox paper I did use Ilford VC filters because for most photographers it is easier to understand filter grades rather than 60M. With a color head I use a sequence: 150M, 120M, 90M, 60M, 30M, 15M (with the yellow filter set to 0), 0M 0Y, and the 15Y, 30Y, 60Y 90Y, 120Y, 150Y (with magenta set to 0). I will put that in the next article I do.
The other thing to remember is that even though a VC filter says a particular grade, you might not get that grade with that filter and paper combination. Please look at the last graph on the article on the Adox paper. Look at the results: with the grade 0 filter you get a grade 1 for the paper, the grade 1 filter give you a grade 2 for the paper and so on for the rest of the filters. This is quite typical results but knowing these results you could start printing with the grade 1-1/2 filter to start. You want to design your negative around your paper and light source.
Remember that a VC head is just a color head with yellow and magenta filters that the manufacturer has adjusted the amount of Y and M to give you a specific grade and just because they say it's a grade 2 doesn't mean it will be a grade 2 with your paper.
It's a lot to explain - so if you need more help you can email or call me (480-767-7105). Hope this helps.
Fred Newman