I have a question here on the whole tip plate thing.
If the tip plates were noy large like the twin rudders of a Gemini, or stunt Machine ,
Buy just a flat ridge of say 1/4 or 5/16 larger than the actual stab and elevator outline. Would they still provide the same benefit yet not over power the actual rudder ?
That will probably do something but not very much.
I wouldn't worry about "overpowering the rudder". All they will do in yaw is to slightly improve the stability in yaw and keep the noise pointed forward a little better. There shouldn't be any rudder offset to speak of, but if you do make it adjustable, its an *extremely powerful* adjustment, and something that moderates the effect might be helpful, and make the adjustment more forgiving. On my airplane, it borders on too sensitive, and a half-a-turn on a 2-56 quick-link (maybe 1/32" at the TE of the rudder) is a huge change. The same issue is why you rarely see a properly-adjusted Rabe rudder - because the required movement in many cases is so small that it's almost impossible to achieve, or is overcome by slop in the mechanism.
*If it was me*, I would just put them on straight, and then see what happens. I don't think it will hurt anything, and will likely make a substantial change in the pitch response (which may or may not be an improvement).
Brett