There is a limit on image size with any straight columned enlarger, as opposed to either an angled column enlarger or one with an extension that places the enlarger head further out from the column towards the operator.
The LPL7452 enlarger already incorporates an extension of 50mm outwards, which made a considerable difference to possible full frame enlargements.
Previously I owned an LPL7700, then the original LPL7450 enlarger and used for a reasonable time the LPL7452 with the forward extension. In all cases the bottom of the column, or indeed the wall can impinge slightly on image area, not always, but it is something you should be aware of.
I wall mounted my 7700 and 7450 enlargers and built a drop table which worked wonderfully. From memory the standard maximum enlargement on the original 7450 was 16X for 35mm film, whereas the 7452 had a maximum of 21X for 35mm film. Both of these were full frame enlargements.
I will concede that by wall mounting you can arrive at greater enlargement factors, but eventually you will end up hitting the wall.
My memory is telling me that I was able to do a full frame 35mm enlargement of 25X before I hit the wall.
Using the LPL7452 enlarger wall mounted in a darkroom where the ceiling height was around 2.4m, the head was about 150mm from the ceiling, with the drop table about 200mm from the floor when the image hit the wall, give or take. 4x5 enlargements would probably be a close call around the same head extension and drop table.
I just went into my darkroom to conduct an experiment with my De Vere 504 with my 150 Componon S lens fitted and the 4x5" negative holder in place. The maximum height I can get the lens from the floor and focused on the floor, was 1900mm. Image size was 1300mm wide by about 1010mm. I say about as there was a bit of fiddling required to get a correct image size. Regardless, the image was cut on the long side by the enlarger column.
The drop table on my De Vere does go down about another 200mm, but I didn't need that to get a focused image on the floor. Just a quickie image from my little Android phone.
If you look at the wall in the background, you will see two light brown pieces of MDF attached to the wall, these are the wall mounts that took the LPL wall mount kits last century.
Mick.