Looks really interesting but the videos are kind of pretentious. Anyway I'm looking forward to Part 3 which will supposedly feature stalls and spins. It would be nice to have a proper simulation of spins, as when I tried them in both MSFS and X-Plane with the default aircraft, the results were bizarre.
None of the default planes in either sim platform spin well, and even the 'aerobatic' defaults are poor analogs to their real world counterparts.
While I am a huge A2A fan (I have both the military and civilian versions of their phenomal P-51), I am not a C-172 fan and don't have their Skyhawk but guys I know do and they are raving about it, as is the Sim press.
For fairly accurate spins in a 'training' type plane in FSX I recommend the RealAir Simulations Decathlon, it comes with a Citabria and Scout version so you can really have fun with it. Earlier this year I put together an overview video of the IAC 2013 Power Primary sequence using this plane (
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vKB468w8QQY&feature=youtube_gdata_player).
Image credit RealAir Simulations
If you want hard core competition style aerobatics in a simulation that recreates a real-world aircraft in appearance, performance and accuracy to a very high degree I recommend the IRIS Simulations Christen Eagle, it is the best aerobatic plane in simulation. I posted a review of the Sim version (
http://acrogimpfsf.wordpress.com/20...t-iris-simulations-pro-series-christen-eagle/) and the real-world plane (
http://acrogimprwf.wordpress.com/2013/04/11/gimpy-pilot-report-christen-eagle-ii-aerobatic-biplane/) in my blog.
Me performing an accurate Torque Roll in FSX using the IRIS Christen Eagle II
I have customized the Christen in FSX with the equivalent of several real-world mods to create my FrankenEagle, a 240 hp Unlimited Competition/Airshow Biplane.
While no substitute for real air under your butt, when the triple paradox of time, weather, money doesn't come together for real world flying, you can keep a lot of skills from getting rusty using a quality sim setup.
'Gimp