I have done a fair amount of printing on Azo. I have a box of the Lomida paper, but I haven't had time to really work with it yet. My experience is based on Azo, but should apply to Lomida as well.
I found that most VC papers can produce an exposure scale longer than the grade 2 Azo. Sorry I can't tell you the filter grades to use, as I use a Zone VI enlarger with a variable contrast head--so I don't use filters. But, 0 or 00 filters should get you there.
To proof my negatives, I did the following. I first printed a step wedge on Azo. I then did a number of step tablets on VC paper using soft settings on my enlarger until I got one that matched the Azo scale. I would then proof my negatives at that setting on VC paper. The VC paper is much cheaper than Azo. The VC proofs gave me a pretty good idea of how the final image would look on Azo. At one time, I even had the time of exposure figured out. For examle, if it took 8 seconds under the enlarger to make a good VC proof print, it would use 25 seconds under the bare bulb to expose the Azo.
The papers are not identical. But the VC gives me a good starting point for the Azo print. A very few times I actually liked the VC print better.
Proofing on VC papers saved me a lot of time and effort. If my negative development was way off, I quickly learned not to even try certain negs on Azo. Albeit, as my technique got better, this rarely happens now. But, mistakes do and will continue to happen.