The problem I'm having is that the nose skin appears to be ever so slightly too short, as well as being under-bent for the leading edge, with the result that it distorts the spar when clecoed or riveted (already riveted the right aileron). The distortion is such that the ends of the spar are pushed aft, with the center of spar pulled forward, which causes the main skin behind the spar to wrinkle and wave severely. It's distorted enough even at the spar location that the nose skin itself is wavy and won't lay flat on the spar.
My initial thought was the under-bent condition of the nose skin was causing too much spring tension (up and down respective to the aileron surface) which would have the effect of pulling the flange on the spar up or down, thus causing the spar web to try to bow in the flange direction to allow the flange to flex slightly outward - exactly as if the flange had been fluted, and "tightened up". I manually overbent the nose skin a little more to remove some of the spring, and reclecoed it, with no change in the situation. The spars (both of them) by themselves with nothing clecoed on them actually have a forward bend, and the spring of the nose skin pulling the flanges outward overcomes this, plus some.
Anyone else had this problem? Any suggestions?
Here are some photos of what I'm talking about, large size for easy viewing.
This first photo shows a straight edge along the spar, with a measured 1/8" gap in the center due to the aft flexing. This is of course multiplied considerably on the main skin, causing all sorts of waving and bunching on the trailing edge.

This next photo is the aileron spar, actually upside down, showing the gaps between the nose skin and the spar. The gap you see on the bottom of the spar is actually the top skin of the aileron, and there are a couple other spots just like that.

This next photo shows a straight edge laid inside the aft of the spar, with the edge along the top flange. There is a gap between the straight edge and the flange in the center of the spar that measures 1/32" - not enough to worry about for riveting here, but enough to cause the geometry of the skins and trailing edge to be completely out of whack due to the induced aftward bow of the spar.

This last photo shows the trainwreck that is the trailing edge as a result of the spar bow.

My thoughts for taking the bow out of the spar were to add several nose ribs between the counterbalance tube and the spar which would force the middle of the spar aft (away from the tube), and/or use 7 ribs instead of 14 stiffeners for the main skins, thus pulling the main skins in better alignment and putting more tension on the skin-spar rivet line to keep it straight. I also considered bending the spar flange inward a little more so that the nose skin spring actually returns it to the 90-degree position and thus maintains a straight spar - but that's a tricky target to hit, and easy to screw up.