I was amazed and confused at all of the carnage lately by Expert flyers in that their models were destroyed because of incorrectly hooked up lines.
I heard of checklists, color coded line ends and the like but the bottom line is really simple.
On real airplanes, the ones in which you ride inside of, we do this thing called a control check. It's done by moving the control device inside the airplane, stick, rudder pedals, control wheel, etc, and then while the cockpit thingy is in the extreme position one looks outside to see if the control surface that makes the airplane do it's pitch, roll, yaw thing is in the correct position for the cockpit thingy position. We call this, "free and correct" and look to see that they actually are.
In control line Stunt this is really easy. Before one signals for launch, do one thing, give the model full up. Fix ones attention to the elevator and see that it is pointing upward. If not, do not signal to launch.
Just a thought. A friendly alert to a technique not so hard to do. I do it every time, myself. On my Olympic I looked at the flaps of course, full up meant flaps down.
Good luck,
Chris...