Okay, I ran in a problem that needs opinions. I looked at the cockpit and found a lever for propeller pitch, which is, by the will of Beechcraft, not supposed to set directly the propeller blade angle but the propeller rpm (which is determined by the angle at a constant pitch/airspeed). So, kind of a backwards logic that makes sense.
The problem is, I use currently the automatic constant speed props. Which well, tries to get at a given throttle to a blade angle ... the 2nd stage of backward logic ... and that one rendered in the process the whole manual propeller angle setting obsolete because JSB did it for you. Means, the lever hangs currently on a property that effectively does nothing.
Soooo ... how much do you want to play with your propeller blade angle? I have set manually the blade angle in other planes, but then you have to keep an eye on your propeller rpms yourself. In the Koenigsadler for example, it is a nice thing of fly on the seat of the pants, kind of fly-by-feel and in the Wuerger, it worked fine by me, but I am pretty sure, not everyone shares my taste. On the other hand, with manual control, I can build us a reverser like the real one has

So comfort over authenticity or going a little bit more hardcore? Opinions please!
Also, I am about to push a version with partial clean up in some files, a repaired propeller animation (the right propeller suffered from typonitis) and the engine gauges connected. The oil temp is off the chart (literally, the needle leaves the instrument) because I had oil temp only in F, not in C and somehow, I was too stupid to build me a recalculator on the fly. But the other ones look about right.