Having used these on a good few planes ,
Im thinking they ( Elevator ' Ears' ) give a more ' finger tip ' style of control , in calm conditions .
In Severe steady winds or turbulent bumpy air , they ' steady up ' control input ,
and maybe even ' downhill ' in loops , around the 3 - 4 O'Clock posn. , help it conter gusts ,
as in it blows into / holds - the turn . Rather than the gust opening the turn .
All have been on thinish Airfoiled Tailplanes. Elevators Actually . 'V'ee ones - Triangular even .
Nose Follows Stab. Conture- section - airfoil . BUT ; Mine generally have inlaid 1/16 ply , main grain longitudeinally.
at the center of the sheet .
I.E. for a 1/4 Sht. ( or 3/8 , 1/2 etc etc . ) a razor saw then hacksaw blade , on the centerline . Almost as the first opperation , on ' The Blank
Maybe a folded fresh sandpaper through , or on a ruler . Ea side . Elev on bench . . You can do it later. of course . Last thing even .
These dont really help you in unflyable conditions a lot . Still the G 51 71 Oz Spitfire , in a Gen U Wine 20 Kt. ( or 25 ) Steadyish wind
with only the odd hole blowing through , the 25 was a 15 to 25 ' lighter ' wind , as it wasnt the glued to the ground cold ocean air ,

' The .018 Laystrate would twang and shiver on the square bottom corners , and be stretching across the way through the bottoms , Sq. & Round . So I consider they do help keep the plane on track . Along with the Heavy Pushrod ( 1 1/2 Oz. - as a ' dampener ' ) and the ' Y '
reversed bellcrank where one line is a anchor & ' the operating ' line is less loaded thus more dialable .
As youre hanging on both hands , at times , in those conditions . Kicking the heels into the deck to avoid sliding on the damp grass / earth ,
and leaning back away .

( Bellcrank just a enlarged to 4 in. Brodack pattern . so 10 mm negative leadout ofset to mounting bolt )
The Ship Itself .

Later fitted Irvine 40 & 10 x 4 three blade , in an endevour to stabilse in big howling roters of wind . ( The Field was adacent a Yacht Club ).
On the third flight , going like blazes , ' That Funny Noise ' in the engine , was the pushrod end , where it'd cracked . As it pulled inverted out of the 2nd wingover corner hard- broke , nosed down , lifted , and , . . . noseded down . And ploughed a trench .
Detaching much of the outer wing .
A further 20 minutes with a disc grinder , due to spruce spars 7 ply reinforcing / gear mounts etc . to cleanly remove the then diheadraled wing. From the undamaged fuse . Anyway , this is its replacement wing . The Same . Another new , in the corner of the shed. Unused as yet.
And a Aerodynamically Balanced Tailplane Assy. on the shelf. Amougst others . The De H 88 & Mosq. hadem too.