Since the question was if any other aircraft have this kind of behaivor, yes sort of the same, the Sikorsky S-55T (sorry Nick). It might not really be a jack stall I think, more like a very veak servo system to very heavy blades, or it might be same thing but just feel diffrent to the pilot.
The S-55T is VERY easy to get in to a bladestall situation if not adhering to the VNE table and follow the WAT reduction closely, especially in mountain flying with gusts. But before it bladestalls on you it starts letting control forces through the servos to warn you that you are getting close. And on the S-55 you can't miss if you loose the servos.
I have never had the questionable "honour" to experience a blade stall in any helicopter, and I hope I never will, but I have for sure had some frightning cases of control forces through the servos on the S-55. I know of at least 3 cases of bladestall on the S-55 at our company in the past, and all went well.
The T version is flying with roughly 20 rpm higher MR rpm than with piston engine (199 to 219), so i wonder how bad the original was. But I guess it did not have the power to reach VNE with max gross as the T version does. In the RFM on the original S-55 it is actually a great deal of text regarding how to avoid and how to cope with bladestall.
Good ol days
CB