It's interesting how some holders can be spot on, and others can be off by quite a bit.
I recently did a check on my Master Technika, and found that the previous owner had mucked around with the GG position - he had installed the combination fresnel/GG backwards, and must have noticed the softness of the negatives....I had replaced the crappy Super screen with a plain GG, and had to make an adjustment. But how?
Unfortunately, the technique shown in Jim's article (and also shown in Ralph Lamprecht's book) wouldn't work, since there is no easy way to position a ruler such that you can measure the distance to the film/GG plane - not without removing the back from the camera, something I wasn't willing to do. What I did instead was create a lensboard-sized wooden block our of 3/4" plywood that would fit into the front standard. I drilled a series of holes into the block that match the size of the thin metal shaft on a digital caliper. I then moved the front standard fairly close to the rear standard, and using a film holder with a sheet of film, made four measurements - one at each corner. Since the holes are just slightly larger than the shaft on the caliper, the caliper remains perpendicular to the front standard - this is important for accurate measurements. I then removed the film holder, and made the same measurements against the GG, and adjusted accordingly.
One of the nice things about this technique is that measuring the distance from the front standard also ensures that the front and rear standards are parallel.
I doubt if this technique would work with a ULF camera, since there would probably not be any way to get the standards close enough together to use a digital (or vernier) caliper. If you could remove the bellows, you'd probably have a shot, but with? Doubtful.
It should work for any 4x5 that can handle a 90mm lens.