Brett,
Am I reading this right? You're saying that your FP.15 powered Ringmaster flew at 80mph on .015x62' lines? Even at 60' that sounds really fast for that combo...
The 20FP ringmaster flew that fast, and I would expect the 15FP version to be in that ballpark, when set up correctly. 3.8 seconds on a 65' radius (62' lines, the length of the inboard wing, and the rotation of Uncle Jimby's arm) is 76 mph. BOX-STOCK 20FP, stock APC 9-4, Ringmaster you can see on the box-top art for the RSM Ringmaster kit (the 20-pointer), in the 25-28 ounce range.
As noted, I would start with something like a 9-5 on the 15FP and then trim it as necessary to get the speed VS setting correct. The airplane I was referring to was around 28-30 ounces with a BOX-STOCK 15FP, and used ~.015x60.
These engines are very powerful compared to ancient slag motors like the Fox 15 - unless someone decides to "improve" them. Paul test-flew his 15FPs in his Mike Dietrich "Cobra". I flew the Skyray 25 with the 15FP, and it was still better than it was with a Fox 35 and could easily fly full patterns in 10-15 mph wind.
I am less convinced on the 15LA but I haven't ever run the one I have. I think most of the other issues above indicate that the airplane was too light for good performance in the wind. You *are* counting on carrying some momentum to a much larger degree than you do on a modern stunt plane. It's counting on it much less than a pre-80's 4-2 break engine.-powered-airplane.
Brett