I'm seeing the top. The airplane stops turning and sort of levels out and I have to bail rather than attempt to keep turning down. The last airplane that did this to me I tried to fix by adding tip weight. Didn't work. Guess I should have asked sooner for advice.
OK, after a bit more time to think about it, first, I presume that you have sealed the hinge lines. If not, seal the hinge lines and start over with the trim process.
I would suggest starting from first principles - set the CG, set the leadouts, check for any misalignments (tail to wing, primarily, both in skew and in tilt, a;so wing to fuselage) and correct them, remeasure the fin/rudder to make sure the fin is *dead straight ahead*, cut loose and straighten out if not. Make sure there is enough engine offset to tell that it is not inboard, and a few degrees won't hurt anything.
Depending on the tail area and design of the airplane, you want the CG to be set right or *slightly* ahead of what might be ideal. Ted's rule of thumb is pretty good for flapped airplanes, set the CG at the percentage of the mean chord based on the ratio of the tail area to the wing area. If the tail is 20% of the wing area, then, the CG can be about 20% of the mean chord - or forward. For non-flapped airplanes, set it at 15% of the mean chord to start, it is much less critical than on a flapped airplane.
Set the center of the leadouts about 3/4"-1 1/4" behind the CG. This may or may not be ideal, but it will at least be safe to fly with. Add enough tipweight to be sure that you have enough. It varies depending on your wing asymmetry. With normal asymmetry (1/2-3/4"-1") then start with enough to counterbalance 1 1/4 ounces temporarily attached to the inboard wing tip. That is, put 1 1/4 ounce on the inboard wingtip and either balance it or temporarily tape it in place. Then add enough tipweight to the tipweight box to just balance it when held by the fin and engine shaft. Then remove that from the inboard. For symmetrical wings, same thing, except use 2.5-3 ounces. This will almost certainly be too much, however, you can cover a lot of other problems with too much, and you can't run 60 mph if you guess wrong and wind up with too little.
Set the rudder with just a hint (1/32-1/16" at the TE) of right rudder. This will also probably be wrong in the long run, but makes sure you are making any errors in the safe direction.
Then go fly it. Upright, check if the wing is level. The outboard wing will probably be hanging down, which is good at this point. Check the control response, and do an "s" maneuver (1/4 turn inside followed by a quick transition to 1/4 turn outside to get back to level - just like you round 8 intersection) to check what happens when you go to from positive to negative G. Again, it should be pulling pretty hard and it will likely roll rapidly from right to left at the intersection due to excess tip weight, but not lose it or get loose at any point. If safe, then fly it inverted level, and note or have your buddies note what happens to the roll angle. What I would expect is the outboard wing will still be down. What is of interest is whether it is down the same amount upright and inverted. If it is the same, the wing is probably straight, if not, it has a warp that you should correct or tweak before you try again.
Check that the wheels line up such that you can see maybe 1/2 wheel radius to an entire radius of the outboard wheel sticking out behind the inboard wheel. If they are lined up, or the outboard juts ahead of the inboard, move the leadouts back a hair, if you see more than half the wheel behind, move the leadouts forward.
Once you get it the same upright and inverted, then, start adjusting the tipweight to try to get the wings level. Go very easy. Work up to it, and check what happens in various load conditions. If it looks level flying level, rolls away a little (right on insides left on outsides) in round loops, then rolls more in hard corners, you have a bit too much. If it should ever start rolling in (left on insides and right on outsides) put more in.
Try all that and it should be at least safe to continue and pull decently well.
Brett