The only quibble I would have is the suggestion for 3/4oz of tip weight on a light weight profile with the tank and engine already outboard of the fuselage centerline. The added weight can't do any harm for initial flights but you might find it excessive.
That's what I was shooting for. It is almost certainly overkill but will overcome a pretty good warp, too, so it lasts long enough to discover it. And truth be told, it's not going to be turning all that tight, and if it's not turning tight, the excess tip weight doesn't really hurt anything.
Brett
p.s. Ted posted while I was, but note well the point about the servo tape. After a while, that stuff *is not* going to peel up, period. It's really tough. But put it on in a spot you can easily cut foam part (I usually use a #11 blade without the handle) and that allows you to remove it. Then the residue can be removed with SIG Airplane Cleaner.
p.p.s. Dennis - huh? If it needs tail weight, it needs tail weight, period, there's no trim trick to get around it. And making the engine run differently to save a few ounces is *always* a mistake. The engine run is *much, much* more important than the wing loading. If the tongue muffler works better than the stocker (very unlikely) then, yes, you get a double bonus, but otherwise, set the engine up the way it runs best and trim the airplane however it needs to be trimmed. Even a minor improvement in the engine run is worth almost any reasonable weight, even on a little no-flap jobbie.
A rather stubborn buddy of Ted and ours once built a Barnstormer, and it had DAU75 car paint put on with the consistency of Jello - and was exceptionally heavy. He put the engine in, and it was *grotesquely* tail heavy. We went out and flew it anyway, and it survived (due to his exceptional natural skills) but was hopeless. I suggested he put in enough lead in the nose to balance it. He added *6 oz* to get it where it needed to be. Flew much better, perfectly acceptable. But he took it all back out because it "made the airplane too heavy*. And in pretty short order he quit flying it. That's the degree of "weight insanity" that people sometimes have - it's better to have a light but unflyable airplane that hangs on a wall, than one that is heavier than you expected, but flies fine. Makes you wonder what the point of this event was.