My guess is that it's stalling. Have you taped the hingeline? It would be slowed down from the previous part of the trick and would be more prone to stalling as a result of slower airspeed. If it is fine in the other areas that Curt asked about and only does it at this part of the pattern you could experiment with a faster lap and longer lines. It seems as though the tip weight is "more" than adequate and you may be masking another problem. You may have a twist in the wing/flaps and some mistrim in the leadout location and tipweight.
I just fought a similar issue with my latest, in the end it needed, a flap tweak, tip weight, pushrod adjustment. In there I also changed engines, prop size, tank type, etc.... However, the good news is it is a weapon now.
I would return to a known bench trim, perhaps one from a friends setup that works, and then work backwards to find the source of your problem.
A thought just occured to me, if your hingelines are taped make sure they haven't split. This has also happened to me where an airplane suddenly started haveing a Goofy pullout from an hourglass. Turns out the OB wing had some damaged hinge tape. Once repaired all was well again.
Digital Diagnosis of trim is very difficult... Good luck with your efforts.
Bruce