Well, just to get you started:
Takeoff at full fine pitch. I don't know if the sim models the different fuel in the outboard tanks. The real life drill is to select outboard tanks, set the boost cut-out to on and give it +9 lbs boost while doing what is by now common knowledge to keep it from veering to the right (brake and left rudder to force left wheel braking, more throttle on the starboard engine and less on the port one), until you get sufficient speed that your rudder becomes effective.
In one of Freycinet's videos you can also see a different method. He only gives it about 60% throttle which lessens the drifting to the right, until the airspeed rises and the rudder is again effective.
Then you can advance both throttles to full, lay off the brakes and keep it going straight with the rudder.
Lift off at about 80-100mph but don't climb. Retract gear and disable the boost cut out (which lowers your maximum boost to +5 lbs) to keep your engines healthy.
Once you reach 120mph go to coarse pitch (pull the pitch levers all the way back, anything above that qualifies as fine pitch so if you just set it to 50% of the way you're still running full fine and high RPM).
Once you reach 150mph you can start climbing. Max climb is +5 lbs and about 2600-2700 RPM (going from memory here) but i don't know how the in-game CEM agrees with that. In any case, even the manual recommends climbing at lower settings for economy reasons so it should be perfectly possible.
Max continuous is +1.5 lbs for lean mixture and +3.5 (if i'm not mistaken) for rich mixture. Once again, mixture is either auto lean or auto rich, there are no in-betweens. In this case however the full-range motion of the levers is historically correct, you just set them according to the demarcation labels on the throttle quadrant. Lean is with the levers forward and rich is with the levers back.
To cut a long story short, as soon as you lift off raise your gear, level out, go to coarse pitch once you hit 120mph, disable the boost cut-out and throttle back to +3.5 lbs boost. When you hit 150 mph trim it for climb, start monitoring your engine temps (you might need to close the cowl flaps a bit, this will also give you some more speed and a better climb) and give yourself a pat on the back.
You might also want to switch to the inboard tanks once you're established in the climb, just to start learning good habits for when the different fuel is modeled (if it's not already). Another reason for this is that only the outboard tanks have the ability to jettison fuel (again, i haven't tested if this is modeled in the sim), so it makes sense to first burn the fuel you can't dump in an emergency during cruise to maximize on saving weight in such a case.
Once you reach your chosen cruising altitude and trim for level flight, throttle back to +1.5 lbs boost and set mixture to auto lean (levers full forward) to maximize your fuel economy.
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