I have colored gaffer's tape all over my gear usually for cine work, I will most likely end up using it for marking the rails on the 4x5 too. Someone ought to come up with an iPhone app that works like that online DOF calculator.
In trying to understand the limits of DOF vs Hyperfocal distance vs diffraction and center of confusion, I am wondering what the limits are in using the Scheimpflug theory in landscape photography where the closest object in my frame is typically about 5-7 feet with a 135mm and no closer than 4 feet with a 90mm or wider.
For example, The attached image is my very first day using 4x5. I shot the scene as a lens test of my 135mm. I first tagged the peaks in focus, then tilted until I saw the rocks in the bottom 1/4 of the frame hit focus. I then re-focused to get the peaks back in and did these steps until I saw both zones come into focus. I then stopped down to F/22 and shot the exposure.
So the lake shore in the background is soft, not ideal...
Is there another way to go about this or am I simply pushing the limits of tilt and need to stop down more, which I generally try to avoid if it gets within a stop or two of minimum aperture due to diffraction.
So, I'm guessing (and that's all I can do with this of course) that your tilt was still off when you moved to setting aperture. My thinking is that you got the bottom of your tilted wedge of focus (top and bottom of the focus region when tilted won't be parallel anymore, I don't believe) covering the mountains, but not low enough to cover the far shore.
I'm no master of this either, and recently made a shot similar to yours, where I missed getting the foot of the distant mountain in sharp focus. For me, this wan't a big problem in the image, because that was a part of the scene I didn't want the eye stopping on anyway, there were power lines... so it wasn't the plan, but it worked out.
In your case, if you had continued slight tilts you might have gotten the bottom (far shore) in focus, and then added a smaller amount of aperture to raise the wedge to include the top of the mountain, but I can't really tell you.
Regarding the focus process itself, I usually start with the near field focus, then start tilting and tweaking from there to find a tilt and front standard distance (focus knob) that captures all the image objects I want in focus. I don't think I get ic-racer's comment above - he seems to be advising without regard to tilt. Of course you could just stop down to f/64, but then you'd be in diffraction land, which you are obviously trying to avoid by using tilt.
In your image, given the nature of the tilted area of focus, your challenge would probably be the near field tall plants, more than the far shore, but it seems not impossible to accomplish. You do probably have to stop down a bit, but not to f/64, to get the wedge to cover what you need.
One thing I think you'll like about your new Chamonix, PKM, is the axial tilt on the front standard. At least for me, it is so much easier to wiggle around than my Wista's base tilt for trying to find the right angle. I keep one hand on my loupe, and one hand on the standard moving the tilt, watching the effect. With the Wista, it took two hands, and all the focus changed due to the base tilt moving the whole lens forward and back. Annoying. With axial tilt you see the edges of the focus area moving across the image. Very nice.
I saw a video on youtube about practical focusing using tilt. The instructor started by focusing on the near field, and noting the focus position. Then he moved the focus to capture the far field of focus. He checked the amount and direction of the move, and suggested that the tilt (or in his case swing) had to move in the same direction when focused on the near field, and that the distance moved suggested the tilt distance (grossly, meaning either a lot or a little). So he would then focus back on the near field, apply tilt in the indicated direction (which is certainly going to be forward for your type of scene), evaluate, and repeat the process. Once tilted, the aperture is going to control the "up" and "down" of the size of the focus wedge, not the "in" and "out" of depth of field.
One lesson I learned recently is to pay attention to the corners of the ground glass while tilting the front and adjusting aperture, to make sure you don't start vignetting. My Schneider 135mm has a lot less coverage than I thought when I started doing tilts.