A comment on Michael's symptoms:
A possibility is that you are experiencing what might be called drag instability of the lines. This is common on faster racing planes. When I first started to encounter it, it was quite unsettling, thinking that there was something wrong with the plane or the controls. I have felt it on everything from F2Cs, F2CNs, Goodyear racers, etc. You can definitely feel the difference between going upwind and downwind. If the effect on a particular plane is fairly minor, you will only feel it only on one side of the circle.
Here is what I believe is happening: the lines are changing in their relationship with one another, such that one will fall behind the other line, drafting behind the leading line and then it will pop out. The drag on the lines is therefore constantly changing at the oscillation frequency, and you can certainly feel it and you can see it if it is bad enough and your eyes are good enough.
Why do I believe this is what is happening, at least on my racers, and perhaps on your stunter? First, I could make the problem go away on some airplanes by getting rid of the line grouper I was using at the handle. Second, I could change the characteristic by changing to lines with different drag values. For example, changing from solid lines to stranded lines or vice versa. Third, it was speed and line-tension dependent. Finally, it changed if you put twists in the lines.
The reason you may be experiencing this on your plane, when it doesn't appear to be common on stunters (in my experience), is that you have a heavier plane, and you may be flying fast, giving lots of line tension. Without significant line tension (at least relative to the line size) I haven't seen this effect. Just a related comment--at the weight you stated, I sure wouldn't be using .015 stranded lines!
There are other possible causes that others have already listed such as control slop, control lack of stiffness of the controls, structural softness of the control surface, and even lack of stiffness of the fixed surfaces. However, if each of these seems ok, then the above might give you ideas on how to check for line instability and perhaps how to reduce or eliminate your problem. For example, if you are lucky enough to have independently adjustable line guides, move them apart, while keeping the average location the same. Check to see if it goes away with no/some/lots of twists in the lines. And flying on longer lines at the same speed should also reduce the problem.
Let us know what you find out!
Dave "McSlow" Hull