So, I made this plane to be a flying test bed for my timer project, without really meaning to try to build the World's Best Stunter. I wanted something cheap, easy, quick to build, and with lots of clear space on the fuselage for mounting weird experiments. I got all that, and more.
What surprised me is that except for one rather serious quirk, the plane is an excellent flyer, to the point where I'd happily put into the hands of anyone from rank beginner to Intermediate on the cusp of going into Advanced.
The problem is that the plane comes in on the outsides. It flies wings level both upright and inverted, it's built straight, it has plenty of line tension at any altitude if it's pointing in a straight line or turning inside, but on outside loops and corners it loses line tension.
I did notice that it had an ever-so-slight amount of left rudder as built (on the order of the TE of the stab cocked in 1/32"); I fixed this, and indeed over-corrected it (TE is cocked out about 3/32" now), but it doesn't seem to change the flight characteristics at all.
The last flying session I tried putting about 1/4 ounce more tip weight into the thing; this didn't seem to change the characteristics much at all -- and since it responds so differently on the insides and the outsides, it can't just be a tip weight issue.
What's going on, and how do I fix it?