What I would first do is check the wing saddle mount, and modify if necessary so that the flat bottom of the wing is level with the stab. This works well for r/c, reducing and possibly eliminating speed related pitch changes. Mine flew well with a higher than usual right-thrust figure of something around 3 degrees if not a bit more, but it also has a large 9" 3-blade prop, which exaggerates the torque problem. Spitfire models in general seem to call for a bit more right thrust than others. A 9" prop is really a bit large for this model, considering that they have less torque issues with smaller props, but I wanted the scale appearance. For a 2-blade prop of 7"-8", I'd probably just go with 2 degrees. The down thrust that we commonly see recommended is partly due to the excessive positive incidence that these models often have. I'd probably only use 0 to 1 degrees, with the wing flat bottom set level with the stab. The Guillows P51 is by far the best flying I've built, with the incidence correction. Offhand it has a very small down thrust angle.
Mounting an outrunner should be fairly straight forward, if that's what you're using. I used a geared setup years ago, where the cowl actually fastens into the front of the gearbox. Outrunners made things a lot easier. The geared setups also tended to move the battery rearward, making the model more difficult to balance.