For making the field even, adding a clone on weak hardwre is a much more fun option than having a 'bye'. One can debate about the required strength. The traditional thinking is that it shouldn't be a spoiler for the top half of the pool, and it should not be guaranteed to finish last.
Given that, I feel that Bliep(C) is already too strong to make the field even and be a substitute for a 'bye'. It placed
16 out of 26 when we tried that. This was single-threaded, but on a RPI v2, which are not slow computers at all. I can imagine it is very demotivating to lose to such a 'bye' replacement when you are normally playing in the tail of the tournament. You should have a reasonable expectation that you could beat it once in a while.
Also I don't regret when you pick an other program for that purpose. But I would prefer some program by an author who is online.
In case the poll is about more than making the field even, I also wouldn't mind if we add 10 more RPIs of various programs. The PI's are really good material for uniform platform contests, especially the v2. Personally, and in general, I don't care much about 'sliding scale' type of arguments, as they usually conceal some concern that needs to be made explicit so it can be discussed, or they are just invalid handwaving. A 'sliding scale' argument by itself is never valid, IMO. But that is just me.
Also, Glaurung and SF are already too different, I would welcome both, why not. After all, it is always fun to beat Glaurung. It is a reminder of where SF once was, and sometimes you need that motivation.
One final thing: Don't underestimate SF on a PI. I expect it to finish in the top 5 when running on a RPI v2 and 4 cores. I think something is just plain wrong with the rpiStockfish(C) configuration on your server. Bliep(C) scores >50% against it, while it should score closer to 5% based on my experience.
In short: just do as you see fit. It is your tournament and it is a lot of fun, and it will stay like that if we don't overthink things
