Well it flies, it was the single most terrifying 4 minutes of my 47 year rc flying history! I ended up tearing the main gear out of the wing but it was only the 1/4" plywood mount plates that let go, and of course a bit of sheeting around the gear mount.
My wife was suppose to film the event but she blew that so I have zero pictures of the thing, sorry.
What happened was the load on the canard was way more than what I figured it was going to be, every time I banked the plane to turn of course the G's of the turn increase the flight loads on all the surfaces. When I would bank the plane the nose would start to dip down just as you would expect, but the kicker was when I went to put in some up elevator I ended up using full up with full up trim and the nose would ever so slowly come back up. The only way I was finally able to fly an approach was by flying a huge circle with a very shallow bank angle. I almost plowed the crops several times trying to fly a normal race-track pattern.
After 4 minutes in the air I finally got an approach that I thought would work, then I ran out of elevator on landing and smacked it on the grass. It will live to fly another day and this time I'll get a good camera person!
The problem is that the entire servo mount is flexing when the servo tries to move the canard. I am able to duplicate the issue by holding full up on the TX, then taking my hands and applying force to the canard like in flight. I can make the trailing edge of the canard go up almost an inch and watch the entire plywood bulkheads and servo mount flex! The servo was moving, it was just not moving the canard but instead flexing the internal mount! Just bad engineering on my part. The good news is that I can go in and stiffen the whole thing up really easy and then we'll give it another go.