Been giving it some today in LO-MAC, trying out my small alterations to Madrus' Cougar profile, and found myself pulling deep into the vertical just to nip a sidewinder up the arse of a MiG-25. Then there I was, oops!

Stalling-in, now what was it they said you should do? oh yeah, kick opposite rudder and push the nose down as much as possible. Nothing! 5 secs go by, and still nothing . . . . . .

Eh . . . .yeah, and another 5 secs later . . . still nothing . . . . .down to 10,000 ft and we really look like we're struggling, the nose is down but we're still too flat, and we're still turning . . . .5,000 ft coming up and it's still not looking good, the spin is slowing but the ground looks awfully close . . .and then the nose drops violently . . . .yes, here we go and this is going to be real close . . .250 ft and I simply got to get the nose up a bit more. I'm sure I trimmed the hedges you know. But, most importantly it worked and I got out of it.
Not once, but twice I managed to get out of it. I was impressed that the correct IA drills worked.

Mind you, in a real F-15, I'd have been gone as soon as the 5,000 ft line came up (maybe even a little sooner!)

It is not the technique that wins a fight, but the more furious mind - Kodiak WOF
You are stuck on stupid. I'm not going to answer that question! - Gen Honore, New Orleans Sep 05