Sax, the Corsair's stall at any reasonable combat speed was fairly benign....it was the nasty characteristics that emerged at low speeds, full flaps when a pilot cobbed the power too much that rendered it unsuitable for carrier ops.....that and the oleo-leg bounce, poor visibility over the nose, and asymmetrical stall.
However, there were other dangerous characteristics that emerged soon after production began on the first models. For instance, the original Navy design specifications called for the Corsair (and the Hellcat also) to successfully recover from an 8-turn spin. It was discovered that after the second spin the Corsair prototype could NOT recover from the spin. Fortunately, the test airacraft was outfitted with a spin recovery parachute, or it would have been lost. One indication of how far the Navy was willing to bend-over-backwards in order to justify the purchase of the F4U is that it REVISED the spin recovery specifications from 8 spins to two.
To return to the low-speed, full-flaps, dogfighting that is going on in AH at the present time, let me state that even IF the Corsair has a slow-speed turn comparable to a Spitfire, deploying flaps carries a plethora of penalties. For one thing, depending on the aircraft type, the effectiveness of the ailerons in blanked, often to a very great degree. Thus, the ability to execute a quick bank and change of direction is greatly curtailed. Secondly, full or partial flap deployment on an aircraft the size and weight of the Corsair for more than a moment or two drastically slows its speed. Acceleration from speeds below 200 mph in a close, hard-turning dogfight would be insufficient to take the Corsair, or the Hellcat for that matter, out of danger. American pilots of those airacraft simply did not make a habit of extending flaps during combat with the Japanese except for the very briefest of moments.
Regards, Shuckins