Craig,
With all my issues with wing incidence on my ES, I can tell you a few
tenths of a degree either way is about as good as the Lancair wing construction
is capable of, and that's plenty accurate for our aircraft. From a couple
discussions, the carbon IV wings are far more "stubborn" when they're closed in
the jigs. The tend to spring back more than the more flexible ES
wings.
We had a series of ES wings closed with improperly aligned wing jigs that
resulted in about 1.7 degrees more incidence at the left wingtip. Those
planes still fly straight with an overall wing incidence correction. I
think the numbers your dealing with are significantly less, and should have
minimal effect on the flight characteristics. Even though your numbers
point to a heavy left wing (more right wing incidence), it may not be enough to
predict your actual flight results. The other factors, engine cant, tail
feathers, torque, propeller slipstream, etc. could cancel the wing thing out and
you may end up flying straight.
I would be more concerned about equal incidence at the tips and equal
washout than how much washout you have. And too much washout is better
than too little. Symmetry is the key. If it were me, I'd fly it the
way it is and see what you have before making any adjustments.
Just my two cents.
Mike