i think ive found a good idea!
you keep reffering to speed wrong, when TAS= 200, thats not 200 Km/h, its 200m/s, all figures in orbiter are given in SI units (seconds, meters etc) and any multiplier is given by a K,M or G before the figure (altitude of 300Km is shown as 300k)
this led me onto another point: the speed is TAS not IAS, if it were IAS, you could hold that same IAS all the way through the atmosphere, but since its TAS it doesnt reflect your airfoil/wing effectivness on its own. in the stock DG, its ALWAYS better to be faster then normal on ascent, since you dont have to worry about overheating or fuel (the DG has enough fuel to get you almost anywhere in the solar system)
keep at it, use RCS all the time (make sure its ROT not LIN, ROT is rotational, and LIN is for small course adjustments during docking etc) and keep the speed really high, high enough to adjust your pitch quickly throughout the entire ascent
i dont use trim, because i use a joystick and i dont like taking my hands away from important controls when i can just pull back a little, you'll find your own way of doing things, maybe not the same as everyone else, i learned in the DGIV, watching the autopilot to get the basics, then copying it myself
good luck man
-=Grover=-
you keep reffering to speed wrong, when TAS= 200, thats not 200 Km/h, its 200m/s, all figures in orbiter are given in SI units (seconds, meters etc) and any multiplier is given by a K,M or G before the figure (altitude of 300Km is shown as 300k)
this led me onto another point: the speed is TAS not IAS, if it were IAS, you could hold that same IAS all the way through the atmosphere, but since its TAS it doesnt reflect your airfoil/wing effectivness on its own. in the stock DG, its ALWAYS better to be faster then normal on ascent, since you dont have to worry about overheating or fuel (the DG has enough fuel to get you almost anywhere in the solar system)
keep at it, use RCS all the time (make sure its ROT not LIN, ROT is rotational, and LIN is for small course adjustments during docking etc) and keep the speed really high, high enough to adjust your pitch quickly throughout the entire ascent
i dont use trim, because i use a joystick and i dont like taking my hands away from important controls when i can just pull back a little, you'll find your own way of doing things, maybe not the same as everyone else, i learned in the DGIV, watching the autopilot to get the basics, then copying it myself
good luck man
-=Grover=-