You might as well give it a shot Terry...you don't need to put it into a shutter to try it out. Just get it mounted on a lens board and use a slow film in dim enough light that your exposure goes out to a few seconds, then use the lens cap or a black hat as your shutter. (Heck, make the lensboard out of cardboard...it only has to last long enough to get through the test.)
I shoot a lot of B&W in 8x10, and most of my lenses are process lenses made for similar uses as enlarging lenses. (I have a number of JML, Nikkor, and Eskafot-Ultragon process lenses, and every one is an excellent taking lens.) The negatives from these lenses are razor-sharp. It's generally expensive to get such lenses mounted into shutters (although I do use a Packard shutter to make using Bulb exposures easier), but if you use slow film and stop down, it's pretty easy to get an exposure in the 1/2 second or slower range and control the exposure by hand.
The worst that happens is that you waste a few sheets of film and a few hours. The best is that you find out that you've got a winning lens, and you can move on with whatever plans you have for it. I'm sure that SK Grimes could help you get it into a shutter.
I have a 135 f/5.6 Componon-S enlarging lens, but I've never tried to put it in front of the film as I have a number of lenses in that focal length range that are already in shutters. Although enlarging lenses are generally optimized for close work, many of them have been known to be good taking lenses as well. I think it would be worth your time to try this out...that lens that you have is not an inexpensive piece of glass and if it works it's likely to work well. (If you're shooting black and white, try at least one exposure through a colored filter. If chromatic abberations are the only thing wrong, you might find that an inexpensive yellow filter will make the lens into a winner.)
Best of luck to you. I wish I had personal experience with that lens to help you out.
Be well.
Dave