Excellent advice already.
I'll add that high white loaded DC inks do not have a soft hand out of the dryer, quite the opposite in most cases. Titanium dioxide, presumably, reacting with the discharge agent and ink leaves a sulphurous crust. You may want to look into pre-laundering if it's retail and soft hand on the rack is critical, otherwise just educate your client. We just did a client requested DC job and they were a little freaked about the white print appearing to crack but wash it and all is well.
Curing is paramount with DC both for color reproduction and washfastness. Simply put, you need time in the dryer and a lot of heated air exchange. You need to somehow get the print off the press as wet as possible and then simultaneously blast all the moisture out while heating the garment up, as quickly as possible. It's a tall order for any dryer- we run a sprint HO with 16' of heat and it can struggle to cure big DC prints rolling off two autos.
You will need to engineer prints from the fabric up, different from the approach with most plastisol or coating type inks.
Your upcoming job should print great with the spec you listed. Activate the red low and experiment with less v. more pigment. Don't be afraid to flash as needed, if the art calls for it.
Last off if you have a dark in like black use a true WB ink. Do not use unactivated DC ink. I've heard of people doing this but your washfastness will be inferior. If you want to run a dark color as DC activate it super low, the activator is part of what makes this ink work.