Paul,
No one else has asked so far, so I will...
Does your elevator pushrod flex any? UP input pushes on the length of the pushrod; DOWN pulls on it. Wire, or any other, "slim column" is susceptible to 'bowing' under a compression loading. In tension, as in pulling the elevator horn for DOWN inputs, the wire's tensile strength is loaded so that 'bowing' (flexing) isn't possible.
If you can detect any bowing, it is too much.
Best solutions:
-- a steady-guide* halfway between the forward (usually flap horn) connection and back (elevator horn) ends of the pushrod;
-- a stiffer pushrod, like the arrow-shaft types,
-- or a heavier pushrod.
* - at the halfway location, the pushrod moves up and down, and side to side, very little over its full travel. The guide should be only large enough to stay clear of the small motions at the mid-point in the travel. It may contact the guise if it bows at all, but the guide keeps that deflection very small.