* my Mom would tie her bag to a kitchen cabinet and drain into a large bowl. to get more she would twist the bag. Twenty years ago I put the hook in the kitchen ceiling mimicking Mom. BUT Having a press is lazy since it does most of the work. I wouldn’t go back, ,, Yield was about 50%.
* rice hulls are called a filter aid, it works by creating channel.
* We can get better press efficiency by having a smaller diameter basket, I have baskets from six inch to twelve inch and keep using tall and skinny, it works faster.. The 4.75 gallon press mentioned earlier may only yield 50% juice. Reducing cake thickness is conceptually the same effect as having a home style bladder press. Traditional apples are usually done with a series of bags separated by drainage layers.
Traditional apples/ pears/ quince are run through a grinder, the goal is less than 1/4 inch and bigger than apple sauce. Traditional small scale would be to mash your fruit/pears with a pole pounding in a tub.
* mixing helps, it exposes high moisture inside to the surface. This is also programmed into bladder presses.
* high moisture applesauce or lees can be pressed through a filter bag if the pressure is high. It works better to let some liquid weep off the bag and keep the solids inside the bag. Once apple sauce like flow stops we can increase the pressure.
* your original post said you already started yesterday, a FYI for next time. Juice comes out of pears/ apples fairly easily if they have a hard freeze (2 days). With a press I get 78 to 80% juice yield. ,,,, Hard fruits that are not ground or frozen have low yield, 30 or 40%.