In general, pretend you are a Jobo machine. The procedure will vary a bit depending on whether you are washing film or paper, but you can usually get good results with about eight thorough rinses, rather than a continuous flow. For film, keep the film in the tank. Give it a quick rinse after fixing, then treat the film with HCA. After the HCA, give the film seven or more one minute rinses, with agitation. For fiber based paper, you can stack prints in a tray of water. For RC prints, it is probably better to give them a quick water rinse and stack them in a dry tray. They will be OK as long as they remain damp. The wash procedure is the same, except you use a tray instead of a tank. Agitate the prints in the rinses by shuffling through them, so that each print gets fully exposed to the water. You can rinse up to four or five prints at a time. The rinses may take longer to do this right - a couple of minutes - but the number of rinses will be about the same - 8 to 10. You should probably check the effectiveness of your technique with a hypo test after washing your first batch. If it fails, increase the number of rinses until it works.