I think you are much better off running with local rules. As soon as you try to make the rules universal, and in particular, put them in the rulebook or worse, run it at the NATs, you are making it a big enough deal for the experts to move in, and you get in the spiral of ever more restrictive rules trying to keep it "simple", which leads to a search for loopholes, which makes it even more dominated by experts. And you have made it a big enough deal that the experts will bother with it. BTR -> Rat -> Slow Rat is the hallmark example. The fact that you had a long debate about in the EC just shows the tip of that iceberg.
Absolutely no one asks the AMA technical director whether or not they can run local rules, they just do it, with the usual cryptic announcements on the flyer, and no one complains because the locals want it that way.
So far, what seems to dominate profile stunt is that almost no one can make their engine run properly. I sat there and watched profile closely a few times at various contests, and it was just one borderline meltdown after another, with no one seeming to recognize there was anything wrong. The chrome on Brodak 40's must be pretty tough, one squeaky lean run after another, courtesy the stock .305 or .308 venturi.
Otherwise the airplanes fly pretty OK even with whatever fuselage and variable alignment you get from a profile fuselage. Using electric removes the engine run issue, of course. I can guarantee you can make a competitive profile airplane well within the existing "official" definition and the classic 1/2" slab fuselage from 1948, so I don't see a critical need to fix the rules or define it a lot better.
Brett