In today's episode of How the Canard Spins, the protagonist experimentally determines the additional amount of elevator trim required for takeoff due to moving ballast from the floor to the nose, where additional coolant expansion tanks are to be located. I don't want to spoil the ending about what happens to the elevator trim spring. (It breaks.) I don't want to spoil the aerodynamics puzzle that only careful-minded watchers will catch. (After a first flight during which people who know a lot about canard flight dynamics observed that the bucking motion was likely due to the canard stalling, he has added weight to the nose and now the craft requires noticeably more elevator motion to lift the nosewheel.) I don't want to spoil what will happen the next time the craft leaves, or maybe even enters, ground effect. (The canard will stall, and it will do so off the end of the runway because that's how far it will travel before it makes it out of ground effect.)
What I came here to spoil is this thread from the comments section:
While removing the bonus turbocharger would require some testing, all of which is required anyhow, and is more than just "somethign that seems like it will work for this phase of testing," I can think of a few things that removing that turbo would not require. Chief among them: An all but guaranteed canard stall off the end of the runway due to moving the CG farther forward from where it was when the thing was already actively trying to kill its designer. (Hmm...shades of Jurassic Park? At least the craft has an appropriate name.)