Correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't that lead us into the issue of stall recovery in ACM?
Yes, as it's part of the element of stall fighting and how much you can push your plane to the edge. If you're in a plane that doesn't have a gentle stall characteristic or an easy stall recovery then that is going to dictate how close to the edge you can fly. In planes like the Lightning with its extremely gentle stall characteristic and it's fantastically easy stall recovery, you can ride the edge that much closer than you could in the other kind of plane I mentioned.
In some situations and/or aircraft isn't it much harder to recover once you've stalled?
I have yet to run into any stall situation with the P-38 that wasn't incredibly easy to recover from, which is why this plane is so well suited for stall fighting. However, like I mentioned above, you have to make sure that 1) your stall recovery is excellent and you can easily identify visually that you're about to stall 2)if you're in a plane that doesn't have a) a gentle stall characteristics and/or (b) easy stall recovery then you do run the very real risk of losing position, angle and/or advantage or crashing.
Stall fighting is more than just listening to that buzzer.
ack-ack