What do you suppose happened to the elevator when the trim tabs moved if you didn't hold the stick?
Theoretically if you gave nose-up elevator trim, a free-flying elevator should move slightly to the nose-down, moving the stick also slightly forward. I thought you were referring to a stick being held at a single position and the trim being used to move the actual control surface in small increments. Once again, I think we just have a misunderstanding.
Many of the aircraft we flew had no way to adjust aileron and rudder trim in flight.
With just a very quick look at some of the aircraft we have, I was surprised to find many of them actually do have adjustable trim tabs on elevator and rudder, and a fair amount even have aileron tabs. I wasn't very thorough, but I was expecting fewer of them to have it and I looked at a smattering of both early war and late war fighters and bombers.
Many of the aircraft we flew had no way to adjust aileron and rudder trim in flight.
If I post a gunnery thread be sure to mention the C-47.
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