Daff
>>You're still forgetting the stickforces involved and the speedranges. With your average aerobat, you're working within 0-150 knots..they were working with 150-400+mph.<<
I'm not forgetting anything. My experience in knife fights that ranged from 0 knots to 700knots+ is that trim was not used with regularity. The intensity of a close-in, very highly dynamic angles fight is such that trimming is one of the last things that I or anyone else had time to think about.
As for throttle control in a scissors...it depends on the type of scissors. In the classic horizontal scissors, once the two adversaries are fully engaged (meaning comparable energy states), then it is typical to be at full throttle. On the other hand, in a descending rolling scissors, where gravity is providing a measure of energy retention, the throttle may well be in idle.
My experience in high angle of attack, slow speed maneuvering ranges from the Piper Cub to the F-104. With regard to trim changes and its effect on stick feel, I don't consider the subject to be of special significance.
Here it is in a nutshell. We take the airplane and we put it where we want it. How 'heavy' or 'light' the stick may feel is irrelevant to the effectiveness of the maneuver.
Andy