how do I drive the boat in the other direction?
Driving the Red Eagle sternward from the bridge:
Usually the bow is the pointy end of the boat, but for ferries it can get real complicated.
Simple solution: camera two is at the bow control station.
To operate from the stern station, use camera 3. The stern controls look like the bow controls except for the engine switches.
There are two sets of controls. The nearer set with the larger wheel is for the stern VSP, which is now in front of you and is like a bow thruster.
The farther set with the smaller wheel is for the bow VSP, which is now behind you and is your rudder, or stern thruster.
The wheels on the side are the respective RPM controls. You may need to shift right, with the right arrow key, in order to turn them.
The white needles point in the direction of thrust.
Normal steering—like with a rudder—is done with the smaller wheel (the bow VSP which is now behind you). NOTE that wheel movement is counterintuitive. You turn the wheel left (counterclockwise) to turn the ship to starboard (“right rudderâ€).
Because helm orders, at least on US ships, must be given as Right Rudder or Left Rudder instead of colorful but ambiguous “Port your helmâ€, there should be big arrows to show the helmsman what’s right and left. (as there are in most US wheelhouses)
You can steer with the larger wheel, which is intuitive. The ship turns in the same direction as the wheel.
Remember, however, that you are steering with the “bow thrusterâ€.
Stopping and backing present a special problem unless you can spin both wheels together.
As you turn one thruster 180 degrees, you will also kick the bow or stern as you go through 90 degrees.
You might want to reduce RPM to 0 while you reverse.
A cheat available at the stern station is to double-click the center of the wheel. This centers the wheel at 0 degrees, which is backing for you.