Top two picks for me are the Logitech G27 and the Fanatec 911 wheels.
They had a Turbo S that I really was considering but the G27 was on sale so that is what I ultimately got.
Before I got the "big boy toy" G27 I had the Logitech Momo that I got uber cheap on ebay. It was really high quality and worked well so I was super excited to get the G27. I wanted pedals with a clutch and a H shifter.
Well I sold the Momo and got the G27 and I ended up dissapointed and wish I had saved my money and kept the momo, or perhaps spent the money and got the 911 Turbo S.
Here are my reasons and all of them are big problems for me.
First is the dual gears that drive the G27 vs the single gear of the Momo. It has 2 motors and one is responsible for the force feedback on the left side of center and the other for the feedback on right side of center. But what happens in a game like Dirt 2 (my fav game) where your constantly micro correcting steering and hitting turbulance? The wheel sounds like its going to die with loud clicking noises as each motor gains and releases feedback as your steer left/right.
Then in a game like Burnout Paradise (my other fav) things that used to feel super real like running over rail road tracks now I dont feel the feedback because I am in center steering. The G27 is very much for sim racers to give strong and accurate feedback on track like settings but not good for arcade games and I do not like the dual gear driven setup. The Fanatec on the other hand uses a belt driven system so the feedback is silent and not distracting like the G27 but its a bit less "accurate" since its not directly gear driven.
The other thing is setup. I had just 2 cables to get the Momo up and going (usb and power) and then then it clamped firm to my desk with its 3 clamp system. Any time I wanted to play a racer I would break out my wheel and play and it felt great.
Now with the G27 its a major task to hook up, there are 4 cables (shifter, pedals, power, usb) and they are not connected on the back of the wheel like the Momo but UNDER it and routed through grooves making it even harder to hook up. Plus worst yet is it uses a 2 clamp system instead of 3. This means you have to tighten it down very very good (and it wont work well on thin desks) and hope it stays well but it still wants to tilt up/down. the Momo's 3rd clamp was on the back of the wheel to keep it not just from going left/right but to prevent up/down tilt. It was much more secure than the G27 and I cant tell you how many times I had the G27 come loose in a race. I feel like I am going to break the gimmicky clamps on the G27 with how they are made. I do not remember feeling like that with the momo.
As a result of this I almost never hook up my wheel now, I would be more prone to use a 360 controller to play.
The mounting and setup issue can be circumvented by having it permanently setup in a dedicated setup. It has holes to mount it down with bolts. So again it seems tailored to a sim player who is very serious about the setup and not a casual user.
The pedals are great, the h-shifter kinda sucks and also suffers the same poor clamps as the wheel so it comes loose a lot and its prone to tilting and that sucks as you are pulling back/forward on it thus inducing tilt.
The Fanatec wheels work with the G27 pedals so I may upgrade my wheel one day but I doubt I will put that kind of money into it when I do not play racing games too often.
_________________
ViciousXUSMC on the Web -
YouTube ::
FaceBook ::
Website