Wow, didn't expect such a reaction from you guys. Thanks a lot for all the positive/constructive/funny comments, really means a lot.

While I am thinking of it, what maneuver are you doing to reverse quickly (such as at 3:22 in the Youtube version)? It looks like some sort of stall turn. Could you describe it?
That is what i am trying to figure out. How in the world he is able to pull that move in a Jug along with some others. I notice that his flaps are down 2-3 notches, but there is the E factor to still maintain stability especially in the P-47.
Well, there is a sweet spot as far as airspeed and nose attitude are concerned to flat stall like this, but its doable from 300mph to level stall speed with the nose pointing at least higher than level. Just yank the stick hard to lower left corner (pull up & roll left) while yanking full right rudder and keep this position until your airspeed comes back from negative - Basically its a L/H snap roll with opposite rudder. When your airspeed reaches back above 0, push the stick down, right roll and rudder to keep the plane from spinning on the way down. If you are too fast (nose down or overspeed), the airflow keeps the nose pointing forward and gyro precession cannot prevail.
The Jug's prop gyro and plane mass is perfect for such a maneuver because it actually becomes predictable where you are going to end up after practice. Be careful trying it out though as there is a risk of flat stalling out of control followed by a possible inverted stall for too long and dump waaay to much E. Keeping engine power maxed out is what makes this maneuver worthwhile because as your airspeed turns negative, your engine thrust is pulling the aircraft opposite of its direction of travel for a short time. This also makes great hammerheads when you have too much E during the rope near 170-200mph. The P47N behaves the most predictably from the other Jugs. You can try it with other rides at your own risk.
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Out of curiosity, how long did it take to just capture the footage from the AH Film Viewer? I have tried to use the Film Viewer, but I get plane stuttering/shaking and many other abnormalities.

About 12hours to capture the footage from the films and 7-8 hours to edit. As for technical problems regarding the film viewer during capture sessions, all I can say is that if
Fraps cannot give you good result (right from the
windowed frame or
full screen(even with the film viewer slo-mo playback)), then you must try to find another screen recording tool like
GameCam or
Camtasia. I tried making this video back when I was on Windows XP: Fraps or GameCam wasn't working and I found a miracle solution with Camtasia. But then, my computer failed rebooting. I installed Windows 7, Camtasia does not work and Fraps works like a charm... go figure. So, like I said, its trial and error...
or pain and suicide 