When any airplane rotates on takeoff it takes a moment for the lift to overcome the inertia.
The larger the airplane the more inertia that must be overcome.
I don't know if the DC-10 requires a greater nose up attitude, but it wouldn't be out of the question. Each type of airplanes have their own quirks.
I don't doubt that the DC-10 takes a firm pull to rotate the nose. This may be what you mean by "forcing the plane into the air".
The reason that large jets seem to climb so slow, isn't their rate of climb, it's their foward speed. They are going so fast foward that they doesn't appear to climbing very fast.
I'll just pull a few numbers out of thin air for ilustration. (if any of you heavy equipment operators want to correct me with precise figures, feel free)
Ground speed at take off = 150 mph
Rate of climb = 1500 fpm
150 mph = aprox 2200 fps
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across 1300 ft of runway
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takes less than 1 second.
Durring that 1 second the plane climbs 25 feet.
Also bear in mind that the aircraft is still accelarating while all this is going on.
Before the flight various performance are calculated
V1 = after a jet passes this speed no matter what happens the crew will continue the take off. After V1 there is enough performance to fly, even with an engine failure. Trying to stop at that point is more dangerous than taking off and dealing with it in the air.
Vr (useually faster than V1) = the speed where the pilot will pull the nose up to the take off pitch.
Acclerate/Stop distance = the distance required to accelrate to V1 and then perform an emrgency stop. For passenger flights this must be shorter than the available runway.
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