The good bhsx2 has a much better 1st handspring than the second handspring. What I'm seeing is that your positions are pretty good in the air on the second one, so it probably feels "just right". Things are pretty good on the hand catch as far as direction, square, and alignment, but you collapse just a bit during the step out and lift, or non lift, from the beam.
Dunno noticed the chin position, and that will cause a slight collapse, but I'm thinking the chin tuck is a reaction to something done earlier. I think what caused a pretty good series to get a little uncomfortable is the timing into the air on the second bhs..... it's rushed into the air, and that puts you in a ready to catch position and state of readiness with the beam still about a foot lower than you'd like it to be, which puts you in the position of having to wait what seems an eternity for that dang beam to get close enough to actually grab it. Well, just like any other beam worker you hate to wait, so you rush to the beam by drawing your legs over, and that turns you into a dart being drilled into the beam.
This is the most common cause for wild wobbles, that never fall off when they look like they should. It happens on perfectly directed, aligned split leaps and jumps, and causes lost CV all over the place. And hey, don't even get me started on the many gymnasts who rush the ending to finish a full turn. Kinda funny about those darn turns, they wobble all over the place but seldom come off the beam because hmm, maybe there was nothing wrong with them at all, except that rush to get it over with.
WHOOPS! Guess who just got lost in a rant.
Geez, and I said it was a pretty good series? Heck yeah, it's a great series with respect to the stuff that usually gives you girls fits of trouble....... like direction, square, alignment, and hand position. So try this..... calm down a bit on the second bhs, and let it flow away from your first bhs hand placement using the momentum you established while starting the first bhs. Really, it's kinda like coasting on a bicycle..... all you have to do is steer.
So go to the floor for a set of ten series and concentrate on how little energy the second bhs takes. Move to the floor beam for another set of ten and force yourself to reproduce the same rhythm and energy level as you transition from the first bhs into the second. While you're working that set of ten, hear these words, "It really is as easy as IWC says"...... because it IS that easy.
Just to make sure I've said it enough..... It's a pretty good series, and it's gonna be a work of art as soon as you learn to guide the skill while it 'does itself' in the same rhythm you use everywhere but beam...... the floor ex mat, the basement floor line, the stretched jump rope in the back yard, the.... well you get the idea.
So 373, try dunno's correction first because it's more direct. If that doesn't click choose the next one in line that makes sense to you, and the next, and keep going until you find the one that makes it as easy as it should be.
