I would worry more about the weight of the material used in tail feather construction, more than the size. A bit of area increase will not add much weight, and is better off to have. The tail heavyness issues depend mostly on the airplane. For rubber, the obvious problem is that you don't have an engine up front, but even with electric, planes like the 190 (I've done both sizes) really need all the gear up front, when sheeted. As for it, the small scale like tail performs fine, with the longer tail moment. I would imagine a number of these planes have issues, as the builder simply refuses to add enough ballast to balance properly, taking the load off of the tail. I realize that's difficult, with minimal rubber power.
Another thing not talked about much is the specific airfoil used. Some Guillows planes have airfoils with far rearward max camber points, such as the FW190 and other flat bottom airfoiled Guillows warbirds. They look awkward to me, but this airfoil allows for a further rearward CG, which really helps with planes like the 190. I would have never tried the CG point that works well for rc, if a friend had not tried it first. This plane is sheeted, and has a CG of 47mm from the wing LE, if I remember correctly. Video on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UVSIrZ_tph8&list=UUtk2LreLH_IhNe3uS3fLSoA&index=8&feature=plcp