Skyscraper
Cleared for Takeoff
The job of the rudder is to keep the tail lined up with the nose of the plane.
When you get too far over the rudder and elevator swap jobs.
It's not that complicated.
Exactly how I was taught. The rudder simply counteracts adverse yaw to keep the tail and nose aligned into the relative wind, not to turn the airplane.
Perhaps my understanding is not complete or is not entirely accurate (and I welcome clarification if that's the case) but the way I look at it is this:
If you are in knife edge flight, the rudders will move the nose up or down relative on the horizon (but left or right from the pilots perspective, same effect the elevator would in straight and level), and the elevator will move it parallel with the horizon either right or left (but up or down from the pilots perspective, same effect the rudder would have in straight and level).
Do I have this right? It feels simple to me, until I begin to over-think it...