Thanks for the lesson. Let me guess, your introduction to spins was in a 172 for your CFI, and that is the only aerobatic maneuver you have ever done. Am I correct? You have demonstrated a lack of knowledge and understanding. I would like you to explain to me since you know, what forces act on an airplane that would make it anything other than benign during a constant G roll? Who ever said I did anything to risk my career?
While you are totally correct about a constant G roll, openly admitting to rolling nearly everything you have ever flown is not a very good idea, well, because you are openly admitting to breaking regs,
and flaunting it. It may be perfectly safe, but it surely isn't very wise.
Is a Lear 55 certificated for aerobatics (I have a type from CAE in one, LR-JET)? Because that's what you are admitting to, on a public forum, in front of your piers and possible future employers and co-workers. Knowing that, were I to own an airplane, I'd never hire you, let alone allow you to touch it, because I now see you as a liability. And like I said, it may be perfectly safe, doing rolls in a Lear, or whatever you have your hands on now or previous, isn't legal, and that makes you a liability in two ways. #1, I could send you off to training and 3 months later you get caught somehow and your certificates revoked, so I just wasted all that time and money on your training. #2, you are exposing me and my company to potential legal issues should you roll and make a mistake, ending up in someone's backyard/house, all caught on film in a "hey y'all, watch this" moment.
Were I out doing those kinds of things, I'd shut the 'eff up about it reeeeaaaaaalllll quick. I am willing to bet you don't have the feds approval to be out doing those kinds of things. It is not part of a "normal flight" and thus, would be considered aerobatics. A steep climb, low pass, or sharp turn could, and has, resulted in certificate action against pilots in the past, and will still do so in the future.
In other words, now is your chance to put down the shovel. You can't put that dirt over there back in now, but you can certainly not add to the pile of it, and the size of the hole you are digging.