The Cardinal experiment was one of Raisbeck's efforts to look at what it might take to increase the aspect ratios and wing loadings of light airplanes. The results are pretty marginal for all the torture they went through to demonstrate the technologies.
http://cafefoundation.org/v2/pdf_tech/High.Lift/AIAA.1977.High.Lift.Cardinal.pdfVery painful way to gain several knots, reduce useful load by quite a bit, and change the clean stall characteristics to something requiring Wet Ones and new shorts afterwards. High wing loadings are seldom advantageous without quite a bit of excess horsepower. Parasitic drag is still large for the Cardinal, and per the test results, it could only muster a bit more speed and actually required more power than the stock design up until it reached about 120 mph. That means lower rates and angles of climb. The dynamic stability also took a predictable hit, and it was too hard to even collect frequency data at 120 mph or above apparently. Oh well.
But in true form, if you skip the data and jump right to the "Conclusions", Raisbeck pays homage to his funders:
...... In summary, there significant advantages increasing wing loading typical light aircraft.

This is a good reason why very basic, 70 year old rules about wing area and moderate loading are so much more effective at achieving low speed results with our small airplane. Wing section usually has a lot less to do with performance than people usually think. Variable geometry often adds a great deal of weight in exchange for heroic efforts and a little lower landing speed and stability. And excess horsepower and low parasitic drag rule the speed queens.