Ther 240/9 4-element Apo Nikkor easily covers 8x10. But being shorter than "normal" focal length, you will have some illumination falloff. You can obviously burn in the corners or perhaps use a special ground diffuser thicker at the center than the edges. But the falloff is minimized by stopping the lens down to f/16 or so, at which point the corner shapness is also optimized for 8x10 (a stop further down than for 4x5 film). But at only 2 to 3X enlargement, even f/11 should give excellent results if you don't mind some corner and edge burning. It's a sharper and more contrasty lens for enlargement than a 240 G-Claron, which will cover as well, but ideally needs to be stopped down even more. The notion that true apo lenses like Apo Nikkors are not significantly better than ordinary enlarging lenses is an uninformed statement. They were marketed for more stringent optical standards to begin with. There never was a 105 Apo Nikkor. The shortest focal length was 180/9. What did exist in 105 was an Apo EL Nikkor. Ctein never owned one, though he would have like to. The last of these got snatched up for high-end scanning back art reproduction cameras. They were most commonly made in 105/5.6 and 210/5.6, but clear up to 360mm, the last sale of which was around $11,000 US. Way, way more expensive than ordinary El Nikkor enlarging lenses. But for just a stop less max aperture, the Apo Nikkor design delivers very similar performance to the Apo EL at less bulk and weight.