There is still active research in the area, eg. https://www.lix.polytechnique.fr/~bournez/i.php?n=Main.Publi...
you can't simulate an 11-integrator general-purpose analog computer or other differential analyzer with a 10-integrator differential analyzer, and you can't simulate a differential analyzer with 0.1% error on a (more typical) differential analyzer with 1% error, unless it's 100× as large (assuming the error is gaussian)
the ongoing research in the area is of course very interesting but a lot of it relies on an abstraction of the actual differential-analyzer problem in which precision is infinite and error is zero
given these hypothetical abilities, you can of course simulate a two-counter machine, but a bigger question is whether you can compute anything a turing machine cannot; after all, in a sense you are doing an infinite amount of computation in every finite interval of time, so maybe you could do things like compute whether a turing machine will halt in finite time. so far the results seem to support the contrary hypothesis, that extending computation into continuous time and continuously variable quantities in this way does not actually grant you any additional computational power!
this is all very interesting but obviously not a useful description of analog computation devices that are actually physically realizable by any technology we can now imagine