I am in a better position to answer your question now. One of my small machines installed on a very poor wind site has shown this tendency. Previously there has never been enough wind in the right direction to make it furl.
It was built with the intention of using a 5ft prop but it got fitted with a 5ft 6" one to get a little more out of it in this crazy site. The offset is marginal for the increased blade size and I just assumed it wouldn't furl. It will probably never see enough wind for this to be a real problem so I let it take its chance.
Today there was some very strong and fairly turbulent winds and I saw it furl and also saw this over furl and shut down process.
The tail is a conventional version with pipe on pipe hinge and it has a fair bit of friction. Also the stop is such that the tail can come truly parallel with the prop.
It takes a lot of wind to see anything happen, the seeking force defeats the furling until the wind gets really violent. It then does furl and over furls quite drastically once the seeking force is defeated. Normally it slows very considerably which is to be expected with this arrangement and beyond about 60 deg of tail movement the restoring force bringing it back into the wind is falling. It ought to hold at least constant force ( which my normal furling schemes do).
Occasionally with a violent gust it goes into furl and slows down a lot, then some turbulence flips the tail right to the full furl position parallel with the prop. immediately the tail pulls the prop at right angles to the wind and it stops.
it ought to go straight back into the wind but with the reduced restoring force and the friction of the hinge reducing the restoring force even more it does not attempt to get back into the wind until the prop actually stops and the gyroscopic force no longer tries to hold it in position at right angles to the wind.
My conclusions are that the offset is marginal causing the seeking force to hold it into the wind until the wind speed is far too high. Once it breaks away from the seeking force it wants to drop to a much lower power level and this is aggravated by the falling restoring force and the tail pivot friction. Then given a sudden flick of the tail from turbulence it gets out of the wind entirely.
I believe that if the tail stop was set to something like 80 to 85 deg it would still drop to very low power levels but would never get into this stop situation.
Based on this machine I would say it needs more offset and the tail stop ought not let it go right to shut off. I don't think any form of damping would help in any way.
There is almost certainly always going to be some of this tendency with a machine that drops power drastically on furling especially with this hinge arrangement where the restoring force falls towards full furl. Reducing hinge friction probably helps avoid some of this reduction of restoring force as I have another machine using an inclined hinge but with decent pivots on the tail hinge. This also drops power on furling but never stops and as far as I can remember the tail does go right to 90deg as it is used as a backup shut down mechanism and the tail has to go pretty well to 90 deg to shut down.
Hope this helps but none of this has been proven to cure the trouble.
Flux