Originally posted by funkedup
What I meant was, "Tell me how what happens in AH is different from real life."
Another thing that AH does not model correctly is compression. In AH no plane truly compresses, the stick forces just become excessively heavy. Every plane in AH can trim out of a compression dive, this is wrong, only those planes that had a trim system like the 109 (there was a few) could do this, and even most of them didn't make it and lawndarted. If you went into compression in a P38 the plane would nose over into a death dive (another indication that once the horstab/elevator lose effect the nose will drop). There was NO WAY the P38 could pull out of this dive until they fitted dive flaps that would reduce speed so the P38's horstab no longer was compressed, and therefore able to push the tail down bringing the nose up. When a plane is compressed the controls does not become heavy. You can move the controls easily, they just don't have any effect because the normal airflow over the control surfaces are disrupted by localized supersonic airflow, so normal trimming would have NO effect.
The 109's trim system moved the whole horstab not just the elevators, so the 109 could trim out of compression. Historically this was very difficult however, and even if death was not guaranteed like in other planes, it was most probable.