I once asked Gieseke (Mr Light himself) how you knew your plane was too heavy. He answered "if you can feel it in your hand carrying it back to the car it is too heavy" Things have changed. We certainly know more about the effects of weight than we did 45 years ago when I got that advice. As Brett pointed out the biggest change is power. It is now virtually unlimited for our needs. I used to live by the 11 ozft2 "rule". Now I think it is more like 14. Maybe it is just me but I think that a properly powered reasonably heavy plane is a better choice that a light one. If the wing is capable of producing enough lift to make a "tight" corner and your controls have enough leverage to produce that lift in the places we need it most then the improved line tension and stability IMHO outweigh the benefits being light and of the thousand or so stunt fliers out there I am sure about 3 agree with me!
Ken
I "think" what you are tap dancing around is what I call the "performance envelope" when talking stunt with my flying bud's.
For a given design, with a given power plant, we usually have a pretty good idea what is an "optimal" weight range for the most varied environments we are likely to need to fly in, at least in our personal opinion.
I've built a design and variations of it over and over enough to know, what is too heavy, and what is too light, and they are hardly EVER too light, because that would mean sacrificing finish, or structure with eminent or pending catastrophic failures if you like to get several years of constant flights from an airframe, and we tend to self-correct for that tendency with time and build to what we feel is an acceptable weight, and only occasionally push that envelope by trying new things.
I don't want to start a debate, so I'm intentionally being vague here about square inches and airfoils blah blah blah... for the design I normally fly, 62 to 64 ounces seems ideal, and you can miss the power setting by a wide margin and still be confident in putting up a flight, 65 to 67 is very acceptable but not quite as magical or inspiring like you can do no wrong with the former, 68-70 is also very doable, especially in dense air, but you definitely loose ultimate ability and some confidence as conditions change, power delivery always has to be "on" and perfect, and 70 and up narrows the useful working range of the airframe, and acceptable flying weather greatly, these would not qualify to be my contest ships... (I don't want to hear about how many 70+ oz planes won the Nat's, or how great your 80 oz plane flew/flies, those were not this design, and even if it was, we all know how much the weather, altitude, density alt, and many other factors play into it) I'm strictly talking about planes I ENJOY flying more, and that feel like world beaters at the end of the lines and what we individually shoot for weight wise.
Another factor is power plant availability and longevity. Most pipe engines can easily spin double the RPM we run them at, especially those that started life as high performance R/C engines, (I would imagine electric have an optimal range where they last longer as well) but they were only designed to do that at short bursts, we run them the same RPM for 7 minutes which is another kind of stress, maybe worse in some ways... I tended to want to conserve on my engines I had left, and if given a choice for practice and sport flying, to keep the piped engines a few hundred RPM lower than what is probably "ideal" for the "ultimate" power delivery if I used a flatter pitch. It makes a huge difference in engine life span. It's a personal choice, we all make them and live with the results. If I began flying regular again and wanted to enter contests, and had an unlimited supply of engines, sure, I'd go for the 11K run, lock that puppy in and chew em up and spit them out with glee. In the reality, while I was still flying competitively, I chose to build light enough to run my engines in a more modest RPM range that would give a seemingly unlimited lifespan if well cared for. So back to weight, yeah, it matters for a lot of different reasons to different people.
That's my .02, from a washed-up has-been, heh.
Eric