A high-end sim racing setup is not just about torque and lap time. It’s also about reliability. If your wheelbase disconnects, your pedals spike, or your monitor cables get pulled mid-race, none of the hardware matters.
This guide shows how to build a clean, serviceable cable layout for an Asetek-based cockpit using SIMGASM rigs, mounts and monitor stands.
The goal: serviceable, not just “hidden”
Many rigs look clean until you need to change something. A serviceable build means:
- you can remove the wheelbase without cutting ties,
- you can adjust wheel/seat positions without pulling connectors,
- you can add a button box or handbrake later without rerouting everything.
Step 1: split your cables into three groups
- Power: wheelbase PSU, monitors, motion/tactile amps
- Data: USB to wheelbase, pedals, shifter, button boxes
- Signal/peripherals: audio, display cables, network
Routing these separately reduces noise issues and makes troubleshooting easier.
Step 2: build service loops at every moving point
Any place that moves needs slack:
- wheelbase (if you adjust tilt/height),
- seat slider,
- pedal tray (if you change distance),
- monitor angle arms (if you align triples).
A good rule: you should be able to move each adjustment range without any connector feeling tension.
Step 3: use the rig to manage cables (not zip ties everywhere)
This is where adjustable aluminium rigs shine. On SIMGASM tiers built for clean routing, you can guide cables along the structure so they don’t snag.
Recommended foundation:
- Rig: SIMGASM Sport rig (clean routing + adjustability) or SIMGASM Pro rig (maximum headroom)
- Mounts: SIMGASM Front Wheelmount + Asetek front wheelmount bracket (keeps the wheelbase area tidy)
- Accessory platform: universal peripheral deck for button boxes and shifters without messy clamp solutions
Step 4: keep monitors stable and cables protected
Monitor cabling gets abused because screens are “far away” and people pull them while moving the rig.
- For triples, a freestanding stand like Apex freestanding triple monitor stand keeps screens stable and reduces cable movement.
- For an integrated look, browse SIMGASM monitor stands (many builds benefit from routing cables inside the stand structure).
Step 5: label and plan for future upgrades
Plan for the future you. Label both ends of key cables and leave room for:
- a second wheel rim,
- a button box,
- a bass shaker amp,
- a dashboard display.
The easiest “future proof” add-on is a stable mounting point: universal peripheral deck and keyboard swivel mount keep your cockpit usable when you add more gear.
Practical extras that keep the rig tidy
- Lift the rig cleanly: if you move your setup often, the caster wheel set can make repositioning easier without dragging cables.
- Protect the floor and reduce cable snagging: a SIMGASM floor mat helps keep the area under the rig predictable.
- Keep power bricks off the floor: mount them to the rig or a shelf so they don’t collect dust and they can’t be kicked loose.
These aren’t “performance upgrades”, but they prevent the small problems that ruin race days.
If you’re mixing ecosystems (USB wheels, button boxes, multiple brands), read the Asetek compatibility guide first. It will save you time and adapters.