Danny,
Just to add to the mix yet another issue and that is of carrier placement. It seems that the Devere 5105 does not place a 35mm neg directly under the lens and so I set up a guide to show where to align the neg on the double glass carrier to ensure it is smack in the centre of the lens.
On to alignment tools: I used the Parallel Alignment tool from Versalab bought from B&H. Its a box about four by three inches with a laser set vertically inside with a bullseye on top from which the laser shines. Set up the first time took a little while as I went back to basics setting the enlarger frame as perfect as I could. Thats not as easy as it sounds because not everything is perfectly flat/square or even machined. Some parts are screwed onto others etc and so there is plenty of scope for false readings if you like. After this, it went along these lines:
Level the baseboard as perfectly as you can with a spirit level. Thats not hard because it is huge and flat.
Remove lens and shine laser up from baseboard to glass carrier (or use supplied glass reflector).
Align head/neg stage to baseboard.
Replace lens at lens stage and place reflector on lens front using supoplied rubber bands.
Shine laser at lens reflector and align lens stage.
Place easel on baseboard and align easel to lens stage. When checked against neg stage it should agree perfectly.
Now all stages should be right at the present position of the head and lens stage, but you will see that as you rack up and down things do deviate a touch. This wont be remotely visible on a small print or even a large one from a 5x4 neg, but for a very large 35mm print it does start to matter.
When making a large print I then go back and do the following (after setting up the neg and getting things roughly focused). This means any adjustments will be perfect for the print itself:
Easel to Neg stage (adjusting easel to the neg stage)
Easel to Lens stage (adjusting lens stage)
On my Devere the above takes all of two mins, which is nothing for a neg I might work on for a day and I can see the difference in the prints, but, when all is said and done, I am trying to stop down to f8 for the larger prints as this helps with perfect corners too. I think in realisty a 10x8 enlarger is not the best route for 35mm large prints. For 14x11 etc none of the above seems terribly neccessary, but as you go to 20x16 and the aperture opens up due to reduced to keep print times sensible, there is a compound effect for sure and there can be dramatic reductions in corner sharpness at wider apertures if things are not perfect. I still think that lens curvature is at play and intend to find a 63mm Nikkor for a little more image circle for those large prints compared to 50mm. Column height is not an issue with my set up. I can get about six feet between lens and paper if i want. however, when selling up and starting again, which I will do soon as I am changing countries, I will get a 6x7/9 enlarger for 35mm and 120 and use something larger for only LF.