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Logitech G29 / G920 / G923 is a popular choice, but "compatible" should mean more than just bolt holes. A cockpit is the foundation of your entire setup. When the frame flexes, you lose fine force feedback detail and braking consistency. This collection helps you match Logitech G29 / G920 / G923 to a SIMGASM cockpit, with practical mounting suggestions and a clean upgrade path.
The G29 (PlayStation/PC), G920 (Xbox/PC) and G923 (multiple platforms) are essentially the same wheelbase architecture aimed at different audiences. All three use Logitech's gear-driven force feedback mechanism — a long-running design that's been on the market in various forms for many years. The G923 added a feature Logitech calls TRUEFORCE, which combines force feedback with audio-driven haptics for compatible titles. Otherwise, mechanically and from a cockpit-mounting perspective, the three wheels are interchangeable for this conversation.
The Club tier (80×40) is the right pairing for a G29, G920 or G923. The Hobby tier may also be sufficient — check the specifications for fit, but it's the most affordable entry into a proper cockpit if budget is your primary concern. Stepping up to Sport or Pro is rarely worth it for these wheelbases alone; the extra rigidity isn't being challenged by what the wheel produces, and the budget is better spent on pedal upgrades or planned for a future wheelbase change.
Logitech's G-series uses a gear-driven mechanism rather than belt drive or direct drive. The trade-off is that gear drive tends to produce noticeably less smooth force feedback than belt drive or DD, with a characteristic notchy quality that some sim racers find acceptable and others find limiting. The relevant point for cockpit choice: the forces involved don't challenge cockpit rigidity in the way modern DD wheelbases do. Even an entry tier cockpit holds the wheelbase steady enough that frame flex isn't where you're losing detail. The wheelbase's own technology is the bigger factor in how much detail reaches your hands.
If you're currently using the G29, G920 or G923 with its supplied desk clamp, moving to a bolted cockpit is the single biggest improvement you can make to the setup. The clamp is a compromise that works to get you started, but it has known issues: it loosens over time, desks flex under repeated force, and the wheel's position drifts microscopically with every braking input. Bolting the wheelbase directly to a profile cockpit eliminates all of that — the wheel feels more responsive, the pedals stay put, and your driving becomes more consistent without changing any settings.
For the G29, G920 or G923, the Club tier hits the sweet spot for three reasons. First, it's substantially more rigid than the wheelbase requires — frame flex isn't a limitation at this wheelbase tier. Second, the price point makes sense relative to the wheelbase cost, where spending more on the cockpit than the wheel itself starts to feel unbalanced unless you're planning to upgrade later. Third, the Club tier accepts upgrades cleanly — if you eventually move to a direct drive wheelbase from any major brand, the frame continues to serve.
The one good reason to choose the Sport tier over Club for a G-series build is a planned wheelbase upgrade. If you already know you're moving to a direct drive wheelbase within the next year or two — Fanatec CSL DD, Moza R-series, Simagic Alpha Mini, or similar — buying the Sport tier now means you don't replace the frame later. The G29/G920/G923 will feel completely solid on a Sport rig in the meantime, and the cockpit is ready for what comes next.
The G29, G920 and G923 all have threaded mounting holes on their undersides for proper cockpit attachment, designed specifically for this purpose. Bolting the wheelbase through these holes is meaningfully better than continuing to use the desk clamp on a cockpit. Always refer to Logitech's documentation for the correct bolt specifications. A stiffer mount preserves detail and reduces unwanted vibration.
Logitech's G-series pedal sets have evolved across generations but share a common limitation: the brake pedal uses a rubber-stopper spring resistance rather than load cell measurement. This produces a brake feel that's based on pedal position rather than pressure, which is the opposite of how real car brakes work and makes consistent threshold braking difficult to learn. For many sim racers, replacing or modifying the brake is one of the most impactful upgrades available. A few options:
Whichever path you take, load cell braking demands a stable pedal position and a seat that lets you brace comfortably. The Club tier's pedal deck handles load cell pedal forces without flex.
The G29, G920 and G923 each use a power supply and USB connection. Profile channels in SIMGASM cockpits accept these cleanly, and service loops at the connectors prevent strain when you adjust the seat. Our cable management guide covers the practical setup.
A pattern worth knowing: sim racers moving from desk-clamped Logitech wheels to a proper cockpit often report driving improvements within the first few sessions, before they've made any other changes. The reasons are mostly about consistency rather than rigidity. Your hands are now at a fixed height. Your feet always reach the pedals at the same angle. Your back is supported when you push hard on the brake. Force feedback only translates into useful information if your body is in a position to interpret it accurately, and a proper seating position does exactly that. Our ergonomics guide walks through how to set this up.
Pair your cockpit with a solid monitor stand so FOV stays repeatable. The G29, G920 and G923 don't transmit much vibration into the rig compared to direct drive wheelbases, but visual stability still matters for consistent lap times. A screen that drifts position between sessions changes your perception of speed and distance, which undermines everything else you've set up.
Add a shifter and handbrake mount when you expand into rally, drift or endurance. Logitech makes their own shifter (the Driving Force Shifter) that pairs with the G29/G920/G923 ecosystem and bolts cleanly to profile-rail mounts. Third-party shifters and handbrakes also mount with appropriate brackets — the cockpit doesn't care about brand. Building out the rig over time is part of the appeal of profile-rail construction.
Setting expectations honestly: the G29, G920 and G923 are entry-tier wheelbases that have remained popular partly because of their accessible price point and broad platform support. They're capable of teaching you the basics of sim racing and supporting hundreds of hours of enjoyable driving. They're not capable of competing with modern direct drive wheelbases in terms of force feedback fidelity, detail, or peak strength. None of that means they're a bad starting point — many serious sim racers began on a Logitech wheel. It just means the cockpit you build around them should reflect their place in the wheelbase market, not flagship hardware.
Is it worth investing in a proper cockpit for an entry wheelbase? Yes — and arguably the cockpit improves the wheelbase more than upgrading the wheel to a slightly better belt-driven unit would. The frame also outlasts multiple wheelbase changes, so the investment carries forward if you upgrade later.
What's the difference between the G29, G920 and G923 from a mounting perspective? Negligible. All three use similar mounting threads and physical dimensions for cockpit attachment. Check Logitech's documentation for any model-specific guidance.
Should I upgrade the wheel before the cockpit? Usually the other way around. A proper cockpit makes whatever wheelbase you have feel better, and the frame transfers to any future upgrade. A better wheelbase still on a desk clamp will feel constrained by the mounting.
Is the G923's TRUEFORCE worth chasing? Depends on the games you play. TRUEFORCE adds audio-driven haptics in compatible titles — some sim racers find it adds noticeable immersion, others find the effect modest. It doesn't change the underlying gear-driven force feedback character.
When should I upgrade the wheelbase itself? Most sim racers eventually outgrow gear-driven force feedback if they keep driving regularly. The move to belt drive or direct drive is a meaningful step in feel. Whether that happens after six months or six years depends entirely on how much you drive and how much the limitations bother you.
Cockpit rigidity and flex · Sim racing ergonomics · Clean cable management
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