You can probably resell the shen hao on here for $500 or $550 if you ever decide it's inadequate. I really like mine and I can't imagine dumping the extra money for an ebony for such a simple device as a large format camera. It's a wooden / cloth box, for christ's sake!
You can get lenses cheaper on ebay if you're willing to wait for a bargain. There's no really good reason to buy a new lens unless you can't find what you're looking for - 150mm lenses are cheap and very common. You could probably find that rodenstock or a caltar-II N 150 f/5.6 (the exact same lens made by rodenstock but branded for calumet photo) on ebay for a couple of hundred bucks.
On the other hand, if you don't care about wasting your money, buying the kit gives you everything in one shot without the hassle of waiting for auctions to end, assessing seller honesty, etc. Your call.
You won't get full movements out of a 65mm lens with the Shen Hao standard bellows. You don't even get full movements with a 90mm (a 150 should be fine though). With a 90 I can do a fair amount of tilt (pretty much enough to run out of image circle), but rise/fall is pretty constrained (maybe a centimeter at most). The bag bellows is cheap though and not too bad to change into in the field (though I do tend to avoid doing so because it is one extra hassle and not necessary for most things). Keep in mind that the image circle of a wide angle lens can be pretty small and so you won't necessarily have much movement available to you anyway. My hunch is that you could probably manage just enough forward tilt with the standard bellows for a typical landscape shot but I've never actually used a lens that wide.
You'll usually have to buy a lens board separately, but shen hao (technika-style) lens boards are about $30 at badger which isn't too bad. As mentioned, the lens board for your camera has to have the appropriate hole for your lens / shutter, so it's not really a good idea to stock up on lens boards - just buy them to fit your lenses as you acquire them.
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