For the early 280SL and Euro verson, 8 degrees BTDC is what you should have. The late USA version has a special distributor that has 22 degrees of advance which allows timing to go ATDC and still advance to 38 degrees BTDC at 3,000 RPM.
Yes, exactly, the BOSCH 062 distributor was used on the US-spec 280SL with emission control.
But if the ignition today is converted to a 123ignition or a BOSCH 051 (like on the original Euro-spec 280SL), and the emission control system is disengaged, then I would as you also write, set the timing to 8 degrees BDTC at idle and go for program 8 (Euro spec 280SL), if converting to a standard 123.
I am convinced this is how you get the most performance out of your 280SL, if it is an original US-spec 280SL - which most 280SLs actually are, both in the US and here in Europe as well, because so many US-spec 280SLs have been re-imported back to Europe. Remember that most new w113s were exported to the US, so an original Euro-spec 280SL is actually a rare bird, as it was a very expensive car back then here in Europe, and only the very few could afford it.
As some examples, here in Denmark the approximate prices were in 1969-1970:
MB 280SL: 150.000 DKK
Volvo 1800S: 55.000 DKK
Volvo 121 Amazon: 25.000 DKK
VW Beetle: 12.000 DKK
So this puts things in perspective, and why so few w113s were sold here in Europe.
A contributing factor was probably also that a convertible is less practical in Northern Europe (due to the weather), where most of the wealth were located, compared to Southern Europe where a convertible makes more sense as a daily driver, but where even fewer were able to pay so much for a car like the w113 back in the late ‘60es and early ‘70es.
Cheers,
Christian