Prodrive Announce "THE MOST BEAUTIFUL SIMULATOR IN THE WORLD"

prodrive_racing_simulator.jpg
Working together with legendary car designer Ian Callum, Prodrive announced a new high-class sim rig. You can reserve the package now for £39,000 excluding VAT, duties and shipping.

The Hardware & Software​

Stunningly, the entire rig is encased in a birch wood framing, painted black on the outside.

The Simulator will include a 12 GB VRAM Nvidia Graphics card. This means either a 2060, 3060, 3080 or 3080 Ti will be in the computer. Along that, 16 GB RAM will be available.

The included monitor will be a 49'' Dual QHD with a refresh rate of 165 Hz.

A Simucube 2 PRO powers a Precision Sim Engineering LM-PRO. The pedals are said to be electrically adjustable mechanical pedals. Presumably, those pedals would be designed by Prodrive itself.

The seat is a Cobra Nogaro Street in an upright seating position, allowing for a focus on GT and rally racing.

As an accessory, customers receive a Bowers & Wilkins PX7 headphone.

The PC will already be set up basically and include an Assetto Corsa installation.

If you decide to get one of these rigs, you are going to need a bit of space though. The entire thing is 3.3m long and 1.23m wide.

The Parties Involved​

Prodrive, the manufacturer of this beauty, is known for producing several championship-winning race cars, especially in rallies. Developing many rally cars with Subaru for names like Colin McRae or Petter Solberg, they are used to racing success.

More recently, Prodrive has been developing Dakar rally cars and GTE cars. They even won with Aston Martin Racing in 2017 and 2020 in the GTE Pro class.

Together with Ian Callum, they developed the new Prodrive Racing Simulator. Callum is known for designing cars like the Ford RS200, Aston Martin DB9 and Jaguar F-Type amongst many others.

Impressions​

Overall, the rig looks very well produced and stylish. If I had a good amount of money just lying around, I'd think about getting one myself. There is just one detail that seems off.

keyboard.jpg


The keyboard. It's meant to be in a side pocket. This means you cannot bind any of your keys to the keyboard without having to get it out every time. And given that the only push buttons assignable otherwise are 12 by number and on the wheel, some people might need to bind extra buttons.

I'd expect a nearly 40 grand rig to be at least completely functional and practical. And it just seems like "assigning extra buttons" was an afterthought of the design process. Practicality should still stay above beauty.

What are your thoughts on the Prodrive Racing Simulator? Are you planning on getting it? Let us know in the comments down below!
About author
Julian Strasser
Motorsports and Maker-stuff enthusiast. Part time jack-of-all-trades. Owner of tracc.eu, a sim racing-related service provider and its racing community.

Comments

Think its better for them to sell this furniture separate from the hardware. Because these guys who are buying this (beautiful) design, also want the best available hardware, if that is the RTX3999tii, it will be this and noting lesser like and RTX3080ti.
Same rich guys btw, are not buying a Rolls or Ferrari at the official dealers, nope, they wanting them directly with all the optional stuff and refuse waiting for an half year or more.
 
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Anyone reading this article, or even this website is obviously not in the target market. It’s for the people buying HyperCars to sit in the car barn next to the mansion, when they want to go for a drive without causing any depreciation to their physical asset. Sims are also an eco-friendly solution to the fossil fuel burning automobile ‘problem’

I think it looks great, but so much form over function. No vr, no motion, no 4090ti etc. It’s a bit of a futile exercise. I expect they will sell enough to turn a profit. Then bring out the higher spec mk 2 version upgrade path
 
  1. GFX - why implicit nVidia stuff? E.g. the AMD Radeon RX 6700XT comes with 12gigs VRAM, too (I'm not trying to start a war here - been 50/50 Intel/AMD user since start 90ies, just sayin' that, well...).
  2. Keyboard pocket solution just seems so cozy and 'zen'. But indeed non-practical for 'fixed setup' simmers. However for me driving/racing both newest and +25 year old sims on one and same day and hence remapping anyway for those not in a cloud and totally different racecars within same old sims, this solution teases me :)
  3. Design, design...yes you could problably probably sell it in the executive halls, but still rear bluff-body producing too much wake raigh, just like the nonsence ugly micro cars spoiling the eyes of the viewer on today's traffic. Not making this "thing" faster. But think it's just the marketing wow-effect. Unless the purpose is close attachment of an rear end aerodynamical optimized caravan?
 
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Premium
I dont care it costs a fortune, I dont care its well outside of any price range I would think acceptable. The same goes for luxury cars that are just as out of touch for me.

The difference is I could look at other things outside my price range and still lust over them. What is here to really lust over?

I didnt watch a video, so maybe the answer is there but do I get in it dukes of hazzard style?
 
LOL thank you for the joke of the day! Looks like they hire furniture designer(s) to design a race sim rig, and too lazy to even ask any sim racers for their opinion/insight on the design.

It looks good though, as a furniture.
 
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For some I reason I sauntered over to Sim Labs web site. They are now offering this new product.

X1-PRO Sim Racing Cockpit​

What got me was it costs $1,799.00. It comes with a mounting solution for a single monitor. It supports front mount wheel bases only out of the box. If you have a Fanatec DD wheel, you have to buy a wheel deck as an option.

Now I am not the most anal about stiffness, but aren't wheel decks for DD wheelbases a tad........wimpy. I have my DD2 on a P1-X and it is mounted to the chassis using the bolt holes on the sides of the base.

Someone correct me if my assumption is not valid.

But apparently the market is accepting a huge increase in price for gaming equipment.
 
D
Binds keys on the keyboard. Places it left in the pocket. Random keys presses happening... :D
 
Considering an used BMW M2 from 2017, for example, costs around 45.000 EUR here in Germany, I would defintely buy one of these and spend the rest of the money for track days. :)
48.000 EUR - excluding VAT and shipping - is just insane in my opinion.
 
In any case, beauty lies in the eyes of the beholder.

But I find it interesting they didn't announce it to be "The Best Simulator in the World". ;)
 

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