Fine looking bird John! How did you reinforce the aft fuse from tail twists? Looks mighty sharp, congrats!
Thanks Richard. An interesting question, with what I hope to be an equally interesting answer.
I've become convinced that the "Profile fuselage twist" or PFT is caused by the circular propwash over the tail section.
So, based on that belief, I figured that there were several methods to deal with it. Strengthening the fuse adds weight, and complication, usually without a lot of success. The profile fuse, at a normal 1/2 inch width, is difficult to adequately stiffen up.
I looked at possible solutions using the design. I started out with a single engine profile, and I wound up with what I consider an interesting solution for a single engined profile.
I tilt the stab about 3 degrees towards the inboard side. In flight, the PFT will set the stab level. Also, I believe that the slight tilt helps a bit, even if it's not all removed by the PFT.
An example, when giving up elevator, the tilted stab adds a slight nose in motion, opposite of what the spinning prop does. Of course, the opposite happens with down elevator, again fighting the effect from the prop.
It seems to have worked fine on the several profiles I've used it on, but, the twin turned out to be another issue completely.
Since the engines are on opposite sides of the stab, they, for all intents and purposes, cancell the twisting effect on the tail section. I tilted the stab on the blue one, and it's still slightly tilted in flight, unlike the single engined profiles I've done this to. This leads me to conclude that one can set the stab level with a twin profile.
An edit added because I forgot to include this information.
Another design element is using the built up fuse construction itself to add some anti twist, by the way the built up profile fuse is constructed. Simply put, aft of the wing trailing edge, the top and bottom fuse formers, are narrower than the center, forming curved sides with the sheeting. This helps add resistance to twisting without adding weight.
You might be able to see the slight tilt when comparing my blue one, with Gordan's red one.