In the vid, I have a nice tail slide even if the nose doesn't drop fast enough I think. Then I have that ' nose high wobbeling around' example, and finally I cannot make a dam Spitfire spin. I'm pretty sure they did when stalled while full rudder is applied. 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uSzvthRnx8o
What you guys think?
I've been wondering the same thing for quite a while. My personal
hypothesis of it is that there might be excessive gyroscopic precession of the prop working together with the aerodynamic forces at play during a tail slide that cause this somewhat weird behavior. I doubt there's anything wrong with gyroscopic precession code itself but I'm suspecting that the parameters fed into the model might be the cause. For example, a case where the prop mass is too great or the angular velocity of the prop is too high (say, the crankshaft rpm instead the rpm of the prop end of the reduction gear) would cause greater precession force than what would occur in real life.
I want to emphasize that this is just a hypothesis and it would be pretty hard for me to explicitly prove it. One way to test the theory is to try tail slides with the I-16 which seems to have the worst symptoms of this. As the I-16 starts fall backwards at the top of the tail slide, without any control input, it takes a long while for the I-16s nose to drop close to parallel of the velocity vector when the engine is running at idle. With the engine off and
prop stationary, the nose swings down quickly and uneventfully.
Before the prop mass of the Brewster was reduced, the plane could fall ~4000-5500ft down more or less tail first from a tail slide maneuver before the nose came down. After the reduction of the prop mass (granted, other changes were made as well) the nose drops down rather uneventfully.
The planes that in my opinion seem to suffer from this problem the most are:
I-16
Spit14
Ta152