Originally posted by Creamo
Toad, trim in AH makes a stable plane, and gun platform.
Agree. But it shouldn't. Trim really doesn't affect whether an aircraft is a "stable gun platform" or not. Aircraft design does that. Trim just relieves stick pressure, that's all it does. You work on 'em.. you know what it's supposed to do.
Originally posted by Creamo
I use it exclusive. My Saitek throttle fwd hat switch is used constant, so much I can fly the plane with it if needed.
Again, this shouldn't be necessary; that's the point.
Originally posted by Creamo
CT trim in AH makes you lose a edge, as manual up trim on the elevator turns you better.
Agree again. However, it SHOULD NOT have that effect. (Except possibly, in a very few aircraft, at the extreme edges of the flight envelope.)
Originally posted by Creamo
How this effects the real planes comparison, I dunno.
It's bogus. Now you know.

Originally posted by Creamo
As for the 300 hour “boys” , they pry just ruined engines,
No, they didn't. They went to war and did their jobs. They dropped bombs and shot down fighters. Some died in the learning process, some became aces or Bomb Group leaders. By and large they became well skilled in their trade. These were young men with what we would now consider little training.
Originally posted by Creamo
Would you have a workload in AH even in a trainer like a T6 Texan?
I've got some time in the T-6 and quite a bit more in the very similar BT-13. I don't find them any harder to fly than AH. It's just different, not necessarily "harder". Some aspects of AH are WAY harder than flying one of these. Some things in AH are way easier. But overall, neither one is problem to fly; it's just different.
There's another misconception amongst many that do not fly about "workload".
It isn't constant. You don't take off and have this big, constant workload. Not then in the T-6 or P-51 or B-25 or now in a F-16 or B2.
Work load is not low before takeoff and then high all during flight and low again after landing.
Work load varies. It's high in pre-flight (lots to do), low in taxi, high in takeoff, lower after cleanup and during climbout, very low in cruise, rises as you prepare to execute particular maneuvers or prepare for combat and then reduced again as you actually do the maneuvers or fly combat, low in cruise again, rises a small amount on descent,... well, you get the idea. It varies.
Originally posted by Creamo
I’d like AH to be modeled after a real 2000hp WWII fighter though. Wouldn’t you?
Sure! It'd help my score I think.
Seriously, I think what many folks perceive a P-51 to be like in terms of "difficulty" is a far cry from what they would actually experience if they went to Stallion 51 and flew one. Ask HT how well his PC flying skills from games transferred over to flying at Stallion 51.
The workload isn't nearly as high as some would like to believe and it isn't maxed out when it's time to do the actual fighting. Think about it. They designed the planes to kill other planes. If they intended to win, would they try to make that task overly complex or as easy as possible?
Trim, however, is simply a means to reduce stick pressure, primarly in routine non-maneuvering flight.
Become one with the Cosmic Trim Tab; the truth will set you free. 
Nite all!