... I am using 1g of Gelatine dissolved in 100ml and 2g of Sodium Chloride for my coating solution. Sensitizing solution is 3g Silver Nitrate in 20ml plus 2g in Citric acid = 30ml....
OK! These are pretty much "usual" for salt printing. Your salting solution is 1% gelatin, 2% salt; your sensitizer is 10% AgNO3 and 6.7% CA.
As you noted, the approach I mentioned might help with fog/stain but will not address contrast or how deep the darkest darks are. By reducing fog, It might brighten the highlights though, and that can make a real difference in whether the final print seems "flat". There are some ways to tinker with the proportions to increase contrast, but all of them will be minor tweaks compared to how it is exposed.
I don't know what kind of negative you are using, but if it is transparent ( like film or pictorico ) there are some things you might try to improve contrast and separation of tones. I think of the printing as having 3 stages:
first) bring out the darks and mids but highlights remain paper white and no highlight detail at all.
second) once the darks and mids are most of the way to where you want them, bring out the highlight detail, and stop when the brightest whites you want to keep are starting to get some tone ... this is often the crucial step and has a big effect on what your highlights are going to be like at the end.
third) a "blast" step which doesn't change the image very much but it "locks in" the darks. Without this step, the darks will fade more in processing and you won't get enough "depth of printing" for toners to work well. This might be a problem in February London if the sun is not out.
On a sunny day, you can tape a piece of thin white paper over the printing frame glass ( a "diffuser" ). Then there are 4 levels of UV exposure:
- with diffuser, pointed at sky away from the sun
- with diffuser, pointed at the sun
- w/o diffuser, away from sun
- w/o diffuser, at the sun ( the "blast" )
Depending on the weather and the negative, the first "darks" exposure might need 1) or 2). After an hour or two of 1), if it's not progressing fast enough, then switch to 2) and it might be ready to progress to the "highlights" exposure in 30 or 40 minutes.
The point I'm trying to make is that you can use a very long, slow exposure to build up contrast. So if you are not already doing that, it's worth a try. If you can see that the darks are developing, it's okay to go 2 or 3 hours or more. If they aren't progressing much, then you switch to the next higher level of exposure, but the idea is not to touch the highlights even if it means if the exposure takes hours.
On a cloudy day, things are trickier. If it's bright out, it might make the diffuser even more needed, but if it's a gloomy day there might not be enough UV to do the highlight exposure. You might be limited to "away from the sun" or "toward it" with no diffuser. But don't be afraid to let the "away from the sun" exposure go for hours if you can see that it's progressing. Any density you build up during this stage will be there when the highlight exposure starts... so anything at all will improve the separation of the darks compared to skipping this slow exposure step. Even if the darks don't get very dark it will still be an improvement.
It can be hard to get a good "blast" if the sun is really low or if it goes behind thick clouds. I have a BLB setup but it doesn't work for the "blast" step... it makes the highlights muddy before the darks get locked in. I have quite a few failed prints where I just couldn't get enough sun to finish them off properly.
Good luck! London forecast is for partly sunny tomorrow, so hopefully you have a good chance.