The flap on a stunt model is no different that the flap on the end of the wing. Both are plain flaps. Roll rate on the later is a direct comparison and quantifiable while the stunt model is not measurable therefore not quantifiable. The results are interesting because what make the performance better is transferable. Simple as that.
Try sealing the flaps on the inside, and leave the outside unsealed. Then get back to me about confirmation bias. Or, if you are *really sure*, do it the other way!
I would note that it is such a strong effect that there is a detectable difference between sealing between the hinges (leaving about a 1/32 gap at each hinge) and sealing over the hinge.
BTW, you are generally right about hinge moment, as a general proposition you cannot get a lot of deflection due to hinge moments. Trying to get more tension might get you more deflection in some cases, but most of the methods to "get more line tension" cause bigger problems than the one you set out to solve. In some corner cases, *adding weight* to get more tension for a given speed greatly improves your margin over the Netzeband Wall. The limiting factors is making it so much heavier that the wing loading considerations or vertical climb is so impacted that it is a net negative. This was almost always the case with classic engines, so making it lighter always made it better. But not any more.
Brett
p.s. As always, I admit with I rip off/"learn from" others. Bill Werewage seems to have been the first person to grasp the effect, comparing cloth-hinge models with pinned-hinge models. As per usual, he did not exactly go out of his way to share that information. Denny Adamison was the first person that mentioned it in print, howevet, and it was one those "D'oh!
<slaps forehead>" moments for a lot of us. Frank Williams did the wind tunnel test where he got 40% more lift and a much more linear response.
https://stunthanger.com/smf/stunt-design/some-videos-of-a-tufted-sv11/msg625169/#msg625169Paul Walker was the one who first noticed it mattered if you sealed over the hinges or between (maybe the 2005 TT?), and for fans of confirmation bias, I thought he was exhibiting Howard's accused "princess and the pea" phenomenon. Then I tried it, it was not subtle. Since Denny mentioned it, Ted and I solved lots of problems with both stalling, and with massive inside/outside turn differences on various airplanes by sealing the hinge lines. The original Imitation-type stabilizers were massively thick and had very deep, sharp-edged hinge lines and that was where it made the biggest difference, like, from almost unflyable (to me, Ted can fly anything...) to our current standard of performance.
P. P. S. BTW, on the topic of confirmation bias, I had it in reverse for several things - the hard-point handle, which sat in my toolbox for months until Ted cajoled me into trying it -and I am still using the same handle today! The most irritating was the elevator wedges, I took off, flew 1/2 a lap and yelled a bad word out to my flying buddies. It was the worst day of my competition life - because David was right about it. Dennis Nunes and Jim Aron can confirm my reaction.