LongRoadBob
Cleared for Takeoff
It is much more difficult to precisely control the aircraft for long when it is not neutrally trimmed. You should normally always trim the aircraft to maintain the current flight speed and regime (level flight climb, descent) with no pressure on the controls. That way, if you release pressure you know what the plane will do, and if you feel pressure you know you are deviating from the current flight regime. Deploying flaps will change the required elevator position to maintain the current flight regime, so you should trim out that change. For example deploying flaps on my AA5 on downwind will cause a nose down pitch which is trimmed out with a short roll of the trim wheel nose up. I don't want to have to hold nose up pressure all the way down final, and have no good feel for the landing flare pull required when that time comes. Use your trim to neutralize control forces and give you consistent feel for the landing flare.
I like all you wrote, but unless I’m mistaken isn’t the OP asking more about just trimming “in anticipation”?
Sort of like skipping the step where you use the stick/yoke to get the right airspeed, and then trim to take pressure off? I could see this being a thing a pilot might do after years flying the same plane, but I’m being taught to do it as you say, control the stick, trim off pressure.
I don’t see a real advantage to skipping the manual adjustment, at this point in my training. I did find the interesting (luvflyin wrote) idea of trimming so you have slight back pressure, but again, at this stage for me I’m gong by the “book” as I have learned it.
Was explicitly pointed out to never use the elevator to fly, just to relieve pressure.
As for “overthinking it” as some mention, it’s what we students do. There is so much to take in, and any given area of flying we are trying to put the separate peices together, so we overthink. I am guessing a lot of experienced pilots have forgotten how much they probably did this too, it’s natural.