All I said was he can and will tilt his tail....... he does it for control. If he did not do it then he'd probably be the first one to the crash site.
Ok, I can go with that. Maybe I mistook your original meaning.
Did you see the part where I mentioned a bird with a tail can fly just fine if the tail is removed? They don't need the tail for flight, even if they normally have one. They don't even need any time or "practice" to get good at flying without it. A bird is hindered much more by the loss of a single (or even a part of one, for that matter) primary, than by the loss of it's entire tail.
The tail is useful in flight I'm sure, but is probably used as much or more for balance. Especially while perching or feeding. In flight, it's especially useful for braking, and is often used
opposite of what you'd expect (if you thought it was used anything like the equivalent of a horizontal stab).
It's actually not as flexible as you might think, especially for the fastest birds, due to their fused vertebrae. It has a whole lot of ability to go "down", not as much ability to go "up". An exception would be birds that raise their tails for display (turkeys, peanoodles), but then, they don't raise them for flight...
It's worth noting too, that some of the most "flighted", fastest, and agile birds have comparatively-small or practically no tail at all (swifts, shearwater, albatross), while the birds with the largest tails are much more ground-oriented (pheasants, turkeys, peanoodles) and prefer to hide or run from danger than to fly from it.