Tailing can be caused by many different things, from the buildup of debris at the column inlet to a dissolution of the stationary phase, which results in silanols, which results in tailing for analytes with amine functions. There is a section in my book on "HPLC Columns" that is dedicated to column troubleshooting, and it has nearly 40 pages...
Assuming that you are talking about analytes with amine functions that can interact with silanol goups, then the next question is what is the limiting element in surface coverage. For some phases, this has nothing to do with the chain length, and under these circumstances, it is possible that a C8 chain will be split faster than a C18 chain. In the general case of monofunctional silanes and full coverage, you will have a slightly higher coverage with a C8 than with a C18, and under these conditions, one can demonstrate that a C8 is better than a C18.
Otherwise, I agree with everything that Victor has said, especially the point that the C1 endcapping is the item that comes off first under acidic conditions, nearly independent of the other properties of the packing.