from what i can tell your method is right. it's just the loft takes the structure of your curves pretty much literally. you can use some loft settings to basically curve fit them, but then you loose your design intent. what i saw with your curves is the one near the middle had a much different structure than the others. so this throws the loft way off. the reason i brought up the sharp (90 deg bends) is that really makes the curve fit have problems. it makes waves in them. so it's best to not have a 90 bend in any of the profile curves. one thing as a newbie you might want to get familiar with is the rebuild command. that functions a lot like the loft options. so once you get one profile curve in, try the rebuild command to see what it does to your curves. but, if you don't want to loose any design intent, you won't want to use rebuild or the loft simplification options. in that case you need the profiles to all be structured fairly similarly. which means the profile curves all have points and breaks in roughly the same positions.
i attached a pic, showing what i mean, about the curve structures affect on the loft command. when the curves have more closely related structure you don't have a loft that looks like that.
i attached a second pic where i took out all the sharp 90 bends and did a rebuild on all curves with 20 points and a 3rd order curve fit. you can see the loft is nice and goes end to end like you want.
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