I love my HOSAS setup, Virpil Alphas on WarBRD bases with the Z-extensions on both sticks. Feels very natural to me now, using
BuzZzKiller's bindings. Here's how he has them set up:
Right stick:
Left stick:
- forward/backward = throttle forward and back
- This binding feels natural for e.g. landing or negotiating tight spaces, and for combat/precision flying but you wouldn't want to hold the stick forward during a longer steady flight. It's easy to switch from holding the stick forward to cruise control and adjusting speed with the speed limiter once you're doing that. I see the appeal of a throttle for this axis, and I even have one, but they take up such a lot of desk space.
- left/right=strafe left/right
- Z-axis/twist (with the stick near horizontal like in the video thumbnail above)=strafe up/down
I treated the left-stick Z-extension as an experiment, because it initially made strafe up/down feel a bit strange to me - it's more intuitive if you haven't learnt
any bindings yet, but I previously had strafing up/down on that twist axis when the stick was vertical, and re-orienting the stick to be near horizontal required unlearning that. I'm getting used to it now. I find the z-extension MUCH more comfortable for my right hand, but (I can't explain why) I find the stick equally comfortable with or without the z-extension for my left hand. I guess my right (dominant) hand is doing more work in combat flight than my left.
Starting out years ago, I tried my own bindings for fight control axes and buttons, based on I dunno what, just instinct. I spent hours fiddling and revising them when I would rather have just been playing the game. Playing with bindings became a MASSIVE time-suck. It's VASTLY easier, if you're just getting used to HOSAS, to accept someone else's well thought-out and well maintained set of bindings, and spend your time in-game, re-learning which axis you use for what. If you've been using HOSAS for a long time and have gotten used to the axes being configured some other way, that's different. But you could still change something like BuzZzKiller's bindings to suit what axes you're used to for flight control, and keep their button bindings for everything else. Not knocking folks who prefer to maintain their own - it's just an investment of one-time and ongoing effort and frustration to do that.