Paul that can be true if they were too far back to start with. There are other things working here like misalignment (-), a little engine offset (+), airspeed (MO BETTA), rudder offset (-), airplane weight (+=-), the CG of the airplane and wing asymmetry /tip weight. Lets forgo this last one for now.
If you are trying to fly the airplane a little too nose heavy it may try to turn in at you overhead as the airplane slows and goes more knife edge. ( Also an overly large rudder and rear fuselage area may cause more wind vaning, hence moving side area forward is a +. This plays stronger if you are flying slowly). Try to fly the airplane not-so nose heavy and reduce handle line spacing to compensate. Be sure you are flying the airplane at a reasonable clip for it's weight and power. Anything slower than 5.4 for most airplane setups is likely too slow. Once you have the CG set you can hang the airplane from the leadoffs on a single hook and measure how much the nose of the fuselage is hanging down from level. For most airplanes that are otherwise fairly close in trim it should be about one to one and a half degrees. This should be very close to the final leadout setting for an IC airplane. They are doing some other things with electric setups that I haven't looked into much so thats for someone else to answer. If your airplane meets these standards then i'd try at first to creep the leadouts BACK in tiny increments and fly it to sense the results. Tweak these backward and forward to find the sweet spot. If its still not holding well enough then look at more power and props with narrower blades and a little more pitch at the tips especially. Don't be afraid of a degree or two of engine offset.
Dave