I'd be a little worried that it's reducing lift along w/ your reduced drag. Have your stall speeds been affected? Below is a post I copied and pasted from Oshkosh 365 that I read last night.
By Charles Horton
"Several years ago I met the guy who invented the dimple tape at Lakefront Airport in New Orleans (NEW) and we had quite a conversation. He showed me models of propellers on scales and ran them up with and without the dimple tape. The results looked impressive. Since I am (was) an avid cross country racer, I thought it would be worth a try on my 64 Comanche 400. I can't remember his name but it was something like Ochipinnili??? Anyway, he directed where and how to install the dimple tape on the prop and on the wings. I spent the whole weekend testing this dimple tape for him; from morning to night, trying to find the "sweet" spot for best performance. Here are the results: When I installed the tape on my constant speed Hartzell in the location suggested, my climb rate went from 1800 fpm to 500 fpm! Yes, it just about stalled the prop. I moved the tape back a few times on the blade and foward a few times on the blade and the results were the same. With the tape removed, I got my 1800 fpm climb back. Maybe it works better on a fixed pitch prop. I had better luck on the wings. With the dimple tape installed at the suggested spot my stall speed went from 68-72 mph to 62 mph. I did not gain any top speed at low altitudes or higher altitudes (15K and above). I again moved the tape forward several times and back several times on the wing in an attempt to find the "sweet" spot but the first suggested location was the best. For my application, if it didn't increase my top speed any, I didn't want it on the airplane. I can say that it did greatly help low speed handling, especially in the landing configuration. I was disappointed in the prop results but I do have a constant speed prop and I have heard that a fixed prop realizes some improvement.
Charlie"