Michael and Sandy,
I think a limited production run of "new" ULF lenses is a great idea. Based on my hunt for such lenses, the one type of lens that seems to be consistently hard to find are wide angles for the ULF formats - ideally something reasonably compact, not astronomically priced and in a functional shutter. Something like a 210 - 240mm for 7x17, 240 - 270mm for 8x20 and 300 - 330mm for 12x20. Most of what's out there is either very, very expensive, hard to find at any price, lacking in performance, or very big and bulky.
In addition to the Computar and Dagor, there are other older designs capable of covering 85 - 100 degrees. The wide field Gauss is one example. In the conservative Kodak WF Ektar design, it is capable of covering about 80 - 85 degrees. Other manufacturer's pushed the coverage to 95 - 100 degrees. This includes the f12.5 Wollensak Extreme wide angle and the Cooke Series VIIb. I've been hoping for a re-intoduction of the Series VII from Cooke for a couple years, but there are no signs that it will happen any time soon (if ever). Too bad, if they introduced an updated version of their 222mm Series VIIB they would pretty much have the market to themselves Used lenses of this type are now over 50 years old and very hard to find in focal lengths capable of covering anything larger than 8x10 - and I've never seen any in fcoal lengths longer than 10". A 305mm WF Gauss design capable of covering 95 - 100 degrees would be awesome (666 - 727mm image circle).
I'm currently working on any article on semi-wide lenses (80 - 100 degrees of coverage) in the 135mm - 165mm range. A few of these designs were offered in longer focal lengths, but many weren't. At the time they were made (mostly 1950s - 1970s) there just wasn't much of a ULF market. The glass plate mammoth days of the 1880s were long gone and the resurgence in ULF fine art photography hadn't yet begun. With the availability of an unprecedented variety of film types in the ULF sizes, the time may be ripe for someone to produce a line of wide or semi-wide lenses for these formats.
I'm no optical engineer, but if there is anything I can do to help (beyond being an eager customer and evangalist), just let me know.
Kerry