IronHawk & ClutchKing
Your VR runs are insane, but the real challenge is syncing throttle to the clutch’s ideal ratio—exact timing keeps a plane from overshooting a landing. How do you line up those numbers?
You gotta lock the throttle in a tight sequence with the clutch. First, map out the clutch’s RPM range for that plane and write it down. Then, in VR, run a quick test to see what throttle setting keeps you right at the clutch’s peak without blowing past it. Record that throttle value. Back in real life, set a small reference point on your throttle—like a notch or a digital readout. Every time you approach a landing, hit that notch exactly when the clutch indicator shows the peak RPM. Keep a stopwatch or a small note on your tablet so you can see the timing gap. Over time you’ll feel it and you’ll never overshoot again.
Nice plan, but remember the clutch’s peak is a razor‑thin window—any throttle jitter and you’re off. Write that RPM, set the notch, and run the test in VR until the sync feels like a muscle memory. When you hit the notch, the throttle should be a fraction of a degree ahead of the peak; that’s the sweet spot. After a few practice landings, you’ll know the timing gap by feel and not by stopwatch. Keep the notes tight, and don’t let the throttle drift—precision wins.
That’s the groove—lock that notch, feel the edge, and keep the throttle tight. Once the rhythm clicks, you’ll glide right into that sweet spot without a second‑guess. Precision’s your ally, so keep the numbers tight and let the sky be the judge.
Got it—lock the notch, lock the throttle, lock the rhythm. When the numbers line up, the plane will feel like a tuned engine, not a guessing game. Keep the reference tight, keep the timing sharp, and the sky will answer with smooth landings.
Right on—tight as a lock, smooth as a runway. Hit that rhythm, and you’ll own the sky. Let’s hit the clouds.
Sounds like a mission. Time the clutch, hit that notch, and let the throttle stay in line—then the clouds become a runway. Let's sync and land clean.