Bookmarked. This is one promise I intend to follow-thru beyond the half baked level.
I think Defender is the name of that old old formula I had. Or maybe I used D (which maybe was American) at another time in my early darkroom era - now sadly ended, I now process films now and then when I've accumulated a goodly enough number so maybe once a year, my eyesight is now too poor for precise printing work in the dark - tho the book I mentioned in British, so it's probably a similar mix.
Some RC papers worked better than others with odd developers, also tinting and toning. I could never do anything with Multigrade III but there was some hope with the IV. Also a European paper, not Agfa as their RCs were as hopeless as Milford's, maybe from one of the Eastern Europe outlets. It came in a red pack and now and then got discounted at Vanbar's in their Carlton time, this in a bygone era when they actually gave discounts, now long passed.
Again a sepia-tinted memory but in my darkroom days the best papers I found for warm-cold tone shifting or toning were the Kodak ones. I cut my teeth on Kodabromide but quickly went to the old early Polycontrast. Kodabrome RC was still available (again from Vanber's) in the early '90s but IRRC the last stocks they had of that brand went in 1991 or 1992. I remember that well as I bought most of it, again at a discounted price. Oh, the memories...