I was wondering the specifics when developing color prints and had a few questions. If i develop the paper in a tank do I agitate it like you do when developing film or just pour in the chemicals and let them do their work? Also do you guys recommend a stop bath and if you do what do you use? Would my ilfostop work as a stop bath or is that exclusively for black and white? Any help would be appreciated thanks.
RA-4 is very easy to process. I've used the Unicolor, Beseler, and Jobo tubes. Temperature control is not critical as long as you develop the print to completion. I have the luxury of a big darkroom sink, the chemicals can stain surfaces. I helped a friend get started, I had exposure and filtration worked out on my enlarger. I exposed a piece of paper, my friend put it in a Beseler 8x10 print drum.
I warm my chemistry in a microwave (dedicated, no food!) He started with 105 F water pre-rinse, probably around 250mL, he rolled the drum like a log back and forth for about a minute. Next dumped out all the water. Then poured in about 100 ml of developer, warm, I develop at 100F, 95F is standard. Rolled the drum around for at least a minute, you can go longer once the print is fully developed it won't change if you doddle for 30 seconds or so. I usually use a stop bath, I've been given so darn many bottles of Kodak Indicator Stop Bath that's what I use. I use 15ml of concentrate per liter. This stuff is 28% acetic acid, so it will, blind you, it will choke you, it will eat your fingers off. So take precautions or maybe just start with your less odoriferous Ilfostop. Or just use 250mL of water or no stop and go directly to blix.
You can get stains sometimes without a stop. Give it a good Blix with nice warm chemistry. RA-4 chemicals are the cheapest stuff in your darkroom. Wash the print well in warm running water in a tray and if you don't want mold to grow on the print use a final dunk in stabilizer.
If I'm using tubes or my famous 1960s vintage Kodak rapid color processor, I use everything one shot, use once and toss. If I'm using stabilizer I do it in a tray at room temperature, make up a liter use it for a while then toss.
I don't usually stabilize when I use my Kodak rapid color processor, I shake off the water and dry with a fancy Ilford dryer.
I would recommend following Kodak's instructions, the stabilizer has anti-microbial for long term storage. Get a dish rack or one of Ilford's overpriced drying racks, you need to make sure the water or stabilizer can run off. Otherwise you will have water marks.
Warning : RA-4 paper in sheets is an endangered creature. There's only one vendor left, Fuji. Otherwise it's in very expensive rolls. Everyone should print color it's so much fun. But it's awfully tempting to just use a (I can't believe that I'm saying this) a F*$#*ing stink jet printer. Of course you will never throw your enlarger out of a 2nd floor window onto the pavement, and given time you will a S*#@*$#** clogged ink jet printer. MHO subtle as always.