I primarily fly the Fw-190A5 and -D9. With both birds, I always burn the 'forward' tank down to 50% then shift back into automatic burn. I always take the drop tank as well, which means when I shift to automatic it will burn the drop tank, then to 'auxiliary,' then to 'forward.' When I get to 'forward' I have roughly 10 minutes to disengage and land.
With the 'forward' tank full the 190 is relatively unstable when it comes to firing. You will notice the nose porpoising around at key moments. Drop the 'forward' fuel to 50% and it is much more stable.
Similar discussion with the PonyD. With the 'auxiliary' tank full ACM habits are rough. Once you have burned the 'auxiliary tank to empty the PonyD is pretty agile. The difference between the burn of the 190 and PonyD is that the 'auxillary' tank is the first one to burn in both birds. Stay in auto mode with the PonyD, shift tanks in the 190.
The Ta-152 is a different story, or so I am told.
Boo