Oh lord... I really shouldn't do this.

I've spent most of my adult life building and flying airplanes. I'm also a soaring fanatic.. and I eat, live, sleep and breathe airfoils. Without pointing any fingers; allow me to shed some light.. if I can.
When the airfoil is flapped; its inherent AoA is changed. Try this.. draw a typical airfoil on a piece of paper. Draw a straight line thru the leading edge to the trailing edge. For simplicity, and without using techincal lingo so all the boys and girls out there can get the picture we'll call this the 'waterline' of the wing. An aircraft always trys to 'fly' the 'waterline' level.
Next; flap the airfoil. Draw a line from the leading edge to the trailing edge. Guess what.. the 'waterline' of the wing changed.. and the nose just pitched DOWN.
Why do HP aircraft have slats? So when they deploy flap; the slats lower; preserving the mean chord level; killing pitchdown; and the additional undercamber on the airfoil develops more lift at low speed without massive trim changes being required.. in short it keeps that fast airfoil controllable and producing lift at very low speeds. As I recall the first combat AC to have these were the Me262.
Flaps produce additional lift only at small deflection angles. Spill a hair too much flap; and yah just get a massive amount of drag.. no additional lift because the airflow over the airfoil has become 'unattached'. With flap as an added help to turn radius only SMALL amounts are benefical and even small deployments will affect trim IMMEDIATELY resulting in some pitch down... full flap deployment is futile for the purpose of improving turn radius.
My competition sailplanes always mix some up elev trim in with flap.. getting the porportions right depends a lot on AC speed at deployment. The faster the plane is traveling; the more noticeable the pitchdown. Note that the pitchdown effect can be moderated somewhat by tailplane design.. T-tails help some with pitchdown due to the stabs placement well above the center of effort of the pitch radius; dampening pitchown.. but NOT eliminating it.
Hang
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PALE HORSES
"I looked, and behold; a Pale Horse, and it's riders name was Death, and Hell followed with him" Rev 6.8