Mnorl
Sorry I misread your post first time. I think you were asking about what the correct bias current was, not how to measure it.
One thing you can do is determine which power transistor the ML3 uses. Then find out its maximum safe operating area. If you can find a spec sheet, this data is usually published. Then measure the power supply bus voltage for the output stage. Then double it to be safe. Look at the data sheet for the maximum DC current (Ic) the power transistor can have at double the bus voltage without going into secondary breakdown, and this will give you a max top end on the bias current. Of course other parameters such as power dissipation may result in further limitations but you probably should not exceed the maximum DC current at double the bus voltage, just in case you have a failure that pulls the output to one of the rails.
Also, spec sheet says idle power is 180 Watts. You can compute a rough estimate of bias current by determining the bus voltage, multiply by two, and divide into 90 Watts.
So, if you have +/- 90V busses, then that is 180V max, divided into 90 watts give 0.5 amps output stage current. This is a bit of an overestimate because it does not account for the consumption in the rest of the amp, but it may get you close.
I run the same calculation when adjusting the "class A" or high bias current in my JC1s.