Without touching the trim you're not going to fly faster by adding power, you're going to gain altitude. Same goes for reducing power, you're not going to slow down, you're going to descend.
True, and I agreed with this in my post. Cruising along trimmed and level at 8K if I go from 75% to 100% power and do nothing else the plane will generally maintain the airspeed (same for some oscillations, etc.) and it will climb. Pull power and it will descend. But that doesn't mean power = altitude.. that just means that for the existing aircraft configuration that set power setting resulted in X speed and Y altitude.. as
@David Megginson wrote there's a complex interplay happening. Power changes just that... POWER.. what you do with that power, whether it's going up or down, or faster or slower, or some combination of the two.. depends on how you fly the airplane
The same goes for trim - it's not what makes you go up in down, it's what controls speed
"Controls airspeed" for a given plane config and given power.. also different airplanes react differently to different power settings and the same trim setting will not mean the same speed at all power settings. Trimming for 65 knots at 40% power, will, in most planes, not yield 65 knots at 100% power or 25% power. It's a mnemonic that sort of works to help people grasp concepts, but it's not an edict
I appreciate that flying is complex and people have to start somewhere.. but you climb up on these ladders and at some point have to throw them away.
Anyway.. the cow has been milked, and is now dead, along with the beaten horse next to it
Do whatever works for you.. if "pitch for airspeed and power for altitude" works for you.. fine then, happy flying! In 19 years of flying though it's part of my list of aviation things that has been past down and bug me, in addition to the following (let's see how many I can trigger with this
):
-find a rivet on the cowl for your steep turn
--there's a lot more to flying a smooth steep turn than that
-aim for the end of the runway
--why, I'm planning to land in the touchdown zone, why am I aiming for the end?
-all the mnemonics like "potato flames" "arrow" etc.,
--they're not always accurate, and learning these things and understanding why they're important is not hard. One thing to recite something, another to comprehend and understand it
-high wings
--wings belong on the bottom
-Piper's don't need carb heat
--dangerous to teach that a carb'd aircraft can't get carb ice
-You don't need carb heat if you're in the green arc
--also dangerous, I've had a rough running engine in the clouds at 2,400 RPM which carb heat resolved
-the plane won't break at or under maneuvering speed
--I keep hearing this, and it's not true
-if you have an engine failure you can extend your glide by nose diving to get within ground effect
--theoretically true, and there are cool vids of sailplanes doing this.. but telling someone to do this with zero practice when they're already freaking out to fly 20 feet off the ground is suicide
-overshooting your climb and desired altitude just to descend back down to it will make you go faster, since you're getting "on the step"
--so stupid to try this in anything outside of an XB-70 (or the like) it doesn't even warrant a response
-turning an engine backwards will break your vacuum pump
--no, the vacuum pump blades slide in and out of their grooves
-an engine can't start being turned backwards
--it can, and you can even get an engine to "run" backwards for a second or too if the start procedure was messy and you have fuel/air mixture in the exhaust manifold
-"my plane is fine running above 400* CHT"
--ok
-don't extend flaps while banking
--why not?
-max demonstrated crosswind component is a POH limitation
--no it's not
-the more you lean an engine the hotter it gets
--to a point this is true, but at some point the engine begins to cool again based on where you are in the curve, but a firmly held belief by many is the "lean = hot"
-the plane doesn't know it's over water
--yes it does, and the engine will run rough and will be seconds away from imminent and complete failure