Thought I was going to sit this one out but my name came up so I'll share some I've learned on this topic. Two aspects- frontal flow which I haven't spent much time on and side force winds where I have spent more time. There sure is much fertile ground here yet to be plowed for someone interested. Frontal flow is the study more about spiral flow off the prop, complicated by that fat wing right in the middle gumming up the works. Side force is more about flying stunt in the wind. My Shameless is a good all-weather airplane working off an area distribution scheme of about 25/75 percent fore and aft of CG. After that you rely on offset, rudder and momentum keeping the nose out during maneuvers. My updated scenario places the airplane in a stiff breeze, in the vertical, say top of the vertical eight or top of #3 loop in the clover. What is that 75% doing for me now? Not much good-lifting that tail up and nose in at me. In short, move it forward (the area I mean). Think Detroiter. (Or Max Bee)
Dave
Addendum-I ran out of time and so really chopped out my reply, sorry. Dennis, I'm curious in that you express how hard the airplane pulls. That could absorb power if caused by yawing or crabbing way to much. That might be too nose heavy, a lot of motor offset, rudder offset or the lead outs way too far back. I'd be interested to know if the pull falls way off above 60 degrees. If it does I'd suspect one or more of the causes above. It wouldn't hurt at all to trim off some rear fuse area. That would make it more nose heavy though so don't be afraid to glass/ carbon back there for your stiffening. Trimming area aft of the CG probably won't help your fuel mileage nor diminish the level flight pull. It WOULD help line tension above 60 degrees.