Guys:
I mostly fly around in my Cessna 195, out of Arlington, WA.
in this case the difficulty or the fact its a taildragger would not help . the taildraggers are confusing.
I have about 500 hours in the J3, and another 800 hours in the PA-18 150 HP Super cub, towing banners, sailplanes etc. One thing I did regarding the J3 cub, is to dial down the sensitivity setting to about 1/8 inch off the left side of the slider. I also dialed down the sensitivities for the ailerons and Elevators. to about 1/2 inch off the left hand margin. Then in your assignments section, assign the keyboard left arrow to the left brake, and the right arrow to the right brake.
Landing any tailwheel airplane, be it a J3, or a Corsair, requires absolutely on the money, book value airspeed control. in the J3 cub, in real life, or in the sim, I use 50 MPH. take a look at the J3's stall speed. always compute landing speed to be 1.3 times Vso,which is 38MPH, that computes to 49MPH. that is the approach speed, you must be at to fly a J3. crossing the fencem pull power back to idle, and raise nose into a three point attitude, and wait. the J3 in real life will settle to the runway, ideally tailwheel first. In the SIM as well as real life, you gotta fly from back seat, if solo. keeping it straight in SIM, as well as real life is a matter of looking down the side of the airplane. Switch to virtual mode just prior to toychdown, and use your left and right arrows(Left brake..Right Brake) to keep it straight. that is how any taildragger is landed in real world, and how you should land it in the SIM. dialing down the sensitivities reduces the SIM's nasty habit of overcontrolling the airplane. A J3 is as docile a taildragger as you will find, if you use the right tecnique, and fly fly fly the airplane until you are stopped. Deviate, and the J3 will bite you just as badly as will a Corsair a P-51, or even the worst taildragger to land...in real life, and that is the AT-6 Texan. Nothing will bite you quicker than the Texan.
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