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On mine I was given my choice of demonstration stalls, When I chose cross-controlled, the examiner looked at me funny (I guess most choose the secondary or elevator trim stall) and it was the only time during the ride that he appeared ready to take the controls if necessary.
I'm not particularly interested in turning it into an incipient spin, so the method I use for the demonstration is to select a road as my "runway" set up a no-flap power-off landing from a base position and perform the overshoot an "improper" correction. I recover at the first sign of an impending stall,
The student reaction is usually something like, "Wow, the nose was so low when it stalled!" so part of the lesson, even without a major wing drop, is that the nose doesn't have to be way up in the air in order for the airplane to stall.
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Yes. The old overshooting/undershooting traffic pattern final turn stall is a good one to show that stall can happen at any attitude/airspeed/configuration. The USAF harps on this one in the T-38, since that swept-wing jet neither buffets nor breaks when it stalls in the traffic pattern (or anytime). Like any swept wing, it maintains attitude, but just sinks like rock. Final turn, that sink can go easily unnoticed until it's too late in the game, altitude-wise as well as power curve-wise. Additionally, since you're already in a large sink and so close to the ground, more often than not, you're already out of the safe ejection envelope too.