CFIse said:
Rubbish?!!...I've heard that tone before, old folks use it when some young whippersnapper starts talking like he knows what he's saying when he really doesn't have a clue.
Well, how 'bout this one, sonny: The mere fact that an airplane is banked does not, in and of itself, create an accelerated stall.
A normal stall (published stall speeds) is achieved when the angle of attack is increased at the rate of 1 degree per second or a rate that produces 1G.
When you are in a level turn holding altitude, you are increasing back pressure (or angle of attack), creating an increase at a greater rate than 1 degree per second or greater than 1G. That's what causes the stall speed to increase.
An accelerated stall is with a greater load than 1G. That's why a rapid increase of angle of attack in a steep bank, an abrubt pullup, or other "abrubt" maneuvering is the way it is described in the Airplane Flying Handbook.
When you make a climbing turn, do you abrubtly increase back pressure? No, you probably don't; you probably lower the nose slightly to maintain airspeed, so it wouldn't be appropriate to say merely banking causes an accelerated stall.
It's all about the back pressure - the rate of back pressure that causes the accelerated stall, not the bank.