Hi Steve,
The problem with going off the body for ride height is that it's not an easily transferable datum because I very much doubt every car was identically mounted on it's chassis. Nothing dramatic but not as easily identifiable as the backbone chassis itself. I use the points you've mentioned but only as a comparative for my own car, I wouldn't suggest anyone else treat my numbers as gospel truth.
To illustrate the point, with my car unladen I have 15cm underneath the front chassis cross member, 15.5cm just before the start of the engine bay fork and 22cm underneath the rear hoop where the gearbox mounts. So the chassis has a very slight forward tilt, somewhere around 0.5cm.
If I go off the bodywork alone the floorpan just behind the front wheelarch is around 12.5cm and 15cm just in front of the rear wheelarch (which almost corresponds to the 15.5cm point). So it would look like a 2.5cm tilt on the car, which it clearly hasn't got.
As you can't do anything at the rear I'd suggest you try for an imaginary horizontal line between the outboard (brass trunnion) bolt head and the inboard chassis mount bolt. Due to the bend on the lower wishbone this isn't as clear as on conventional wishbones but it's a reasonable start. I used a DIY laser level that casts a horizontal line, the sort you use to get wall tiles nice and level but there's no reason you can't use a normal spirit level/ruler.
Then I'd see how the car drives and raise/lower to get the sort of balance you like.
Brian