IRL 110c model used in BOB where easily outmaneuvered in the vertical or simply outturned by hurricanes and spit1's
outmanouvered doesn't mean outturned. The 110C (all 110s for that matter) had serious troubles if forced into a slow, close, knifefight. It had a huge roll inertia and a rollrate which was only average at medium to high speeds, but quite slow at low speeds. Once commited to a circle, the 110c turned suprisingly well. However, if commited to a turning fight and even with that surprising low speeed turning the problem was twofold:
1-simply said, the plane was unable to change direction of turning as fast as the british fighters did (at least at medium and slow speeds, at high speeds the Spit I was seriously impaired). At medium to high speeds roll was better, but at slow speeds it was VERY slow. And one engined fighters capitalized this serious weak point.
2-the plane was very underpowered for it's size and weight, so any speed lost was hard to regain unless diving. Sustained turnrate was terrible in the 110, even while initial turnrate was quite good for all speeds. Any energy lost, was lost for good, the plane couldn't build it back very fast and was doomed (unless pitted with a hurri, which was an even worse E-builder)
Performance-wise the 110 was much better than the hurricane: noticeably faster at all altitudes, slight acceleration and climbrate advantage, and a better dive/Zoom.
The Spit outperformed the 110 in almost every area, however the germans fought the 110 at high speeds doing slashing attacks when on the offensive, and resorting to diving/hispeed maneouvering when in the defensive. 0G impaired carburators and the famous cementing of ailerons on early spitfires was all the 110 needed to escape from a bouncing enemy.
And so it was the standard evasion tactic for LW planes (emil and 110's alike) in BoB: Dive with neg Gs, build up speed, roll away and escape: the spit can't follow the roll-out and the hurricane will be lost in the dive and is slower once in level flight. And both planes will lose a hefty of space initially because they will have to roll upside down before diving.
I think the 110C was a successful fighter for it's era and that it earned a tarnished reputation because of extremely bad decisions taken by the OKL during the BoB. As long as they flew in free hunts and unattached to close escort duties, the 110 did quite well. But once it was "chained" to the bombers to give them close escort, and so leaving them low and slow, they were smashed because the plane was not intended to fight that way. And could not.