Glad to share my experience with this on my RV-12.My airplane had a very slightly heavy left wing. I double checked all of the things on the Van's 'heavy wing' suggestions like the aft portion of the top skin and pinching the trailing edge. Having seen where other builders were able to fix theirs with the rod adjustment I eventually decided to turn to that. What I didn't like was that it was kind of hearsay and process of elimination, even though it seemed to work. This made me more curious about the initial assembly process as well as a little more precise approach to the adjustment.
What I focused on was that the dimensioning for the height of the rod bearing is not a real precise operation. You have a measurement to take, from the surface of the skin to a point in space at the center of the rod bearing. There is no real index, so there is room for parallax and centering errors. Some people will have more luck with this than others, and I believe that a small bit being off can go a long way. You have 4 chances to get this off by a little bit.
I drew up and printed a little gauge or jig. Super simple and tiny little thing that you just rest against the skin and can slide through the rod bearing. Eliminates any center-finding or eyeball measuring issues. I had a few that were off by a slight amount. Once I adjusted each so that my jig would slide neatly into the rod bearing. This fixed the heavy wing.
Photo is the only one I have, but I'm just holding it up to the attached bearing to view. To use the jig you'll remove the bolt and the round end is your gauge to get consistent and accurate rod height dimensions.
You can find the file on Thingiverse if you have a printer or a friend with one. Let me know if you want to try this and can't print the jig.
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