One thing I haven't seen mentioned in this thread, though I could certainly have missed it, has to do with green/blue, as opposed to yellow/magenta, split printing. Not all blue filters are created equal, and it seems that most of them (Rosco, at least) transmit some green. And they (again, Rosco) tend not to have very high transmission in the blue, requiring long exposure times. On the plus side, a 20"x24" Rosco sheet costs just a few bucks and makes quite a few above-the-negative filters, so I don't have to baby them quite as I would with Ilford 00 and 5 filters.
There's one magical filter in the Rosco catalog, though, the P1394 glass filter that's a special-order item through a Rosco dealer. It has surprisingly high blue transmission, something like 90%, and an extremely sharp band edge that transmits no green. The 6"x6" P1394 I got a couple of years ago was around $100. This was the filter that finally enabled me to get a satisfying print from an extraordinarily flat (even after intensification) negative.
I don't always split print, but when do it's usually with the R389 Green and R68 Blue. I've tried an R384 Blue in place of the R68 and haven't found much difference other than significantly longer blue exposure times with the R384. But every once in a while the P1394 goes into the enlarger, and it makes all the difference, especially if there's a lot of dodging or burning, where its increased brightness really helps my tired old eyes.