I guess you've never heard of the "Huey Walk" then. The UH-1H can't be flown hands out for more than a couple of seconds IRL, it is not a stable machine. I have a few years flying and working on the Huey in the military, and I can tell you, the only time that you don't really move the cyclic is in forward flight. In the hover you are constantly making control inputs to keep it steady. The reason you don't really see the inputs is because they are very slight. In the real thing in the hover you make the "OK" sign with your left hand and wrap the thumb and index finger around the collective and rest your pinky on the center console. The cyclic is held with just 3 fingers of right hand while resting your forearm on you right thigh. Computer joysticks to not offer the resolution needed to fly like this in a simulator. As for oscillations, the Huey shakes and vibrates like crazy, even when the rotor head has been balanced to the exact numbers provided and having flown both the DCS Huey, and the real thing, I can tell you the only thing that is off about the DCS Huey is the VRS. Decent with power is not something to take lightly in the real Huey but, it can be flown out of, given enough altitude, which seems to be an issue in DCS. On the whole I would give the Huey, a solid B+. It would be an A+ but the lack of force trim and the aforementioned VRS issue hold it back.