Let me quote you:
"my opinion that showing someone how to do a maneuver that at their level they (since you used B/U...) SHOULD NEVER PERFORM is ridiculous"
"If you show someone how to do something, especially till they are comfortable, all you are doing is increasing the likely hood that they will do it alone"
My point was you do EXACTLY that when you teach a PPL how to get out of idavertant IMC (hood work). You can debate all you want that the senerio's are different, but it doesn't matter because thats not the point. You do this to make the student a better and safer pilot, not because you want them to feel comfortable about doing something that they shouldn't be doing.
If you dont see the benefit of helping a student become more familiar and become much more efficient in flying an airplane in IMC conditions under the controlled environment of flight training with a II on board, then I have nothing else to say. Holding heading on the roll, after rotation when P-factor kicks in, and changing the pitch angle as airspeed increases to establish the constant airspeed climb after takeoff requires a very good scan and understanding of what is going on with the plane.
I assume from your opinion you have never done one, if you haven't you should try one next time you get a chance. And not because you want to go do 0/0 takeoffs in real conditions, but to improve your skill. Because I think that it is a valuable tool in IFR training. I try to do at least one with each of my students toward the end of their IFR training just to give them another situation to test the skills the have aquired.
In one situation you are teaching for "inadvertent" entry into IMC, in another situation your teaching for the decision to go knowing it is 0/0. You will never here these words, "oops I accidently took off in 0/0," it is a choice that is the difference.
Yes you listed everything that you need to know for a 0/0 takeoff and none of it is helpful in any other way for any other aspect of instrument.
I have simulated quite a few in my commercial training because it was realized that at this level I may be forced to takeoff 0/0 or be fired. It was not taught at the instrument level for the reasons I have listed, thats the same reason we stopped soloing aerobatic airplanes too. Kids were doing inverted low pass fly overs by their friends houses.
Sorry for the side track, anyways I just can't see what it teaches them outside of "this is a 0/0 takeoff" and not a single person here has given me a single thing. Yet in the beginning of the post it was claimed multiple times that such things exist, I find it interesting so many people are teaching something and the only reason is "because it is another tool."
Tgray hit this same thing in the flap post, we teach things without questioning why we are teaching it and what it is teaching. We will all teach what we think will make our students the safest and the best. But I was hoping to at least get some core concept understanding as to what this actually teaches, besides this is a 0/0 takeoff. That way I can use that information to make my own informed decision which so far is sticking with there is no reason other than the experience.