Not trying to troll, but that's a mighty wide range of aircraft and handling characteristics ya got to cover there on your plate.
I don't see the wide range of planes as a problem, actually.
I never really worried about plane type when it came to training. Maybe a very rough, basic, overview of a plane's characteristics, strong and weak points, etc...
What I found in almost every case was that it wasn't the plane-choice that was causing my "students" problems, it was how they were handling the basics. How they used energy and space. How they handled an E-advantage or disadvantage, how they merged, how predictable they were, and how often they reacted based on what they predicted I was going to do, rather than what they saw me do, or knew me to be capable of. Number one problem I saw was that they weren't watching me closely enough, but rather taking quick glances at me, or else that they weren't able to interpret what they saw me doing correctly.
I was able to work with intermediate "experts" in whatever plane they chose, even though I often had to set my views up because I'd never used the thing before. It didn't matter how comfortable they were in it, because they were often making some pretty serious non-plane-specific mistakes...
Honestly, I kind of blew off whatever this-or-that plane choice they made, because it's so seldom that anyone is really able to maximize whatever plane they choose. As a result, it really does come down to the pilot 99% of the time. If each pilot was capable of tweaking the best performance out of their plane choice, then I could see the plane choice mattering much more.
I concentrated on teaching my students how to
fight, not that a P38 can do this-or-that with a slightly better XX than a P47D11 can, or that if it stalls in a bank it'll do this or that...
Teach someone to
fight, and they're dangerous in almost any plane. They can figure out the fine points of their plane on their own, by flying it. Or read about the performance differences. I always considered 1 on 1 training time as far too valuable to squander with those things.