I didn't need to open this thread because it will probably get me back into doing color again. Anyway, for me at least, color is easier than black and white. In black and white you are varying the print density through exposure and the contrast through your choice of paper grade,, contrast filter, and/o development. Every print is different and I needed to find the recipe for that particular print by making and processing several test strips. In color printing you are again controlling the density through exposure but instead of contrast you control the color balance through the filter pack. The good news is that films and papers are very consistent. This means that once you find the filter pack that works it doesn't change hardly at all.
The major cause of exposure changes is the size of the print because as you increase the size of the print you need to raise the enlarger head cuts down the amount of light on each square inch of paper. We know that light intensity falls off as the square of the distance. So if we double the distance we need to increase the exposure time by a factor of 4. Or we can open the lens up 2 stops and keep the original time. I belonged to a camera club and several of us printed our own color. One fellow had his enlarger post marked in f-stops for a 10 second exposure. He just got the image size he wanted, red off the f-stop, set it on the enlarger lens, and exposed for 10 seconds. It worked great for him especially since he was making R-prints from slides. Not so much for me since I was making C-prints from negatives. So I started standardizing. First, I standardized on an enlarger height a 20 inches because I can make contact sheets and 8x10 prints from that height. Next, I put a tape measure along the enlarger post so I could read the lens height directly. Now it is just some math. At first I used a calculator; now I just read the exposure time off of a spread sheet printout which is based on my contact sheet exposure time and 20" lens to baseboard distance.
I like drums as opposed to open trays because once the paper is in the drum I can turn the room lights back on and see what I am doing. I do use a Jobo with a drum that holds two 8x10s. I expose one sheet of paper, put it in a light tight box, expose the second sheet, put both sheets in the drum, put the lid on, and turn the room lights back on. It then takes about 5 minutes to process both prints including the prewash and all 3 final rinses. Put the prints on the drying rack, dry the drum, and I am ready for the next prints.
I went to the Freestyle website and saw that their Silverprint chemistry comes in a 20 liter size. Back when I was using the Kodak chemistry I kept it as concentrates and made up 500 ml batches for each session of ten prints. Is there any problem with storing the Silverprint chemistry in partially filled containers for 12-18 months? With Kodak chemistry if the bleach fix started looking "puny" I knew it was time to order more because it was on its last legs.