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The VRS UDFP20 is a 20 Nm direct drive wheelbase aimed at sim racers who want meaningful torque headroom without stepping into the highest output bracket. At this level, the gap between a cockpit that keeps up and one that does not starts to become noticeable in everyday use, not just at the theoretical limits of the hardware.
The angle this page takes is ergonomics. The right seating position, pedal height and wheel distance are not just comfort factors. They are performance factors. A cockpit that lets you dial in your geometry precisely makes the UDFP20 easier to drive consistently, and that matters more over a full stint than peak hardware capability.
There is a version of sim racing setup advice that treats ergonomics as something you sort out once and forget. In practice, the relationship between your body position and your hardware inputs is one of the more direct paths to lap time consistency. When your seating position puts your arms, ankles and back in a geometry that feels natural under load, inputs become more repeatable. When it does not, you are compensating physically in ways that vary subtly between sessions and show up as inconsistency you cannot trace to a settings change.
The UDFP20 at 20 Nm generates enough steering force that your arm position and bracing geometry become relevant factors. A wheel that is too far away means you are reaching under load rather than steering. A wheel that is too close means your elbows are working against your arms rather than with them. Neither is a hardware problem, but both affect how the hardware feels and how consistently you can respond to what it is telling you.
A modular aluminium profile cockpit addresses this because every dimension is adjustable independently. Seat fore-aft, seat rake, wheel height, wheel distance and pedal angle can all be changed without affecting each other. That adjustability is what allows you to reach a position that works for your body rather than adapting your body to a fixed geometry. The sim racing ergonomics guide covers a practical approach to finding that position systematically.
The SIMGASM range covers four tiers and all are represented in this collection. For the UDFP20 at 20 Nm, the decision between Club, Sport and Pro comes down to how you are using the hardware and what you expect the setup to look like in a year or two.
The Club is a capable starting point for drivers running the UDFP20 at moderate force settings across everyday car classes. It provides solid rigidity for the wheelbase connection and a stable pedal plate, and it gives you the adjustability to get your geometry right without overbuilding for your current use. Club is available in standard colours and in MARINI, JPS and RothBros livery editions.
The Sport is a better fit if you are running the UDFP20 at higher output levels, driving open wheel cars where steering loads are more demanding, or planning to grow the setup over time. The additional profile width adds stiffness at the connection points that become more relevant as torque increases. Sport is available across the widest colour range in the lineup including black, white, silver, red, orange, yellow, blue, green and purple, as well as MARINI, JPS and RothBros editions, making it the most customisable tier for drivers who want a specific look.
The Pro is the right choice for drivers who want zero-compromise rigidity, are planning motion hardware, or are building a long-term setup that should not need to be rebuilt as the hardware evolves. Pro gives the most adjustment range and the most mounting flexibility across all dimensions of the build. Available in black, yellow and across the livery range.
Compare all tiers in detail at sim racing cockpits or read the SIMGASM simulator tiers guide for a thorough breakdown of what each platform is built for.
The most common mistake in sim rig setup is locking in hardware positions before the seat position is decided. Every other dimension references the seat. Pedal angle is relative to where your ankle sits when the seat is in the right place. Wheel height is relative to where your arms naturally fall when you are seated correctly. Monitor distance is relative to your eye position in that seat.
If you set the pedals, then the wheel, then the seat, you are working backwards and will likely need to revisit at least two of those decisions after the seat is finalised. Starting with the seat means each subsequent decision is made against a fixed reference point and needs to be made only once.
For the UDFP20 specifically, getting wheel distance right matters because 20 Nm of force through the wheel is felt differently depending on your arm geometry. A position where your elbows are slightly bent at the natural steering position allows you to work with the force rather than against it. A position where you are reaching or cramped makes the same torque feel harder to manage and less informative.
The UDFP20 supports both front and bottom mounting and SIMGASM offers hardware for both configurations. At 20 Nm, the mounting decision has a more direct effect on how the wheelbase feels than it does at lower torque levels, so it is worth thinking through before the frame positions are finalised.
The front wheel mount attaches the wheelbase to the front face of the frame. Steering forces transfer directly back into the structure, which is generally the stiffer load path. For drivers prioritising FFB clarity at 20 Nm, front mounting tends to be the preferred starting point.
The bottom wheel mount provides more height and angle adjustability and is a practical choice when your seating geometry requires a specific wheelbase height or angle that front mounting cannot accommodate. Many drivers run bottom mounting on hardware at this torque level without issues, and the ergonomic flexibility it offers is a genuine advantage when getting the position exactly right matters.
Decide on your seating position and wheel geometry first. Then choose the mount that delivers the most stable connection within those ergonomic constraints. Read the cockpit rigidity and flex guide for more on how mounting configuration affects overall feel.
Load cell pedals read force rather than travel, which makes them sensitive to position consistency in a way that potentiometer pedals are not. The pedal needs to be in the same place every session, at the right angle for your ankle geometry, and stable enough to resist movement under peak braking load.
Set your seat first, then position the pedal plate so your ankle sits at a natural angle when applying moderate braking force. Lock that in before adjusting the load cell stiffness. Drivers who adjust the seat after the pedals are set often find their braking feel changes in ways they attribute to hardware variation, when the actual cause is a different ankle geometry producing a different force curve through the same pedal.
Also make sure you can brace against the seat structure while braking. At 20 Nm the wheel and the pedals are both generating forces your body needs to manage simultaneously, and a seating position that lets you brace effectively makes both more manageable.
A setup built around the UDFP20 often sits at the centre of a growing peripheral ecosystem. Keeping the build clean from the start makes every future addition easier. Route USB and power cables separately, use velcro ties on anything you might disconnect during normal use, and leave a service loop at every connector. These habits add a few minutes to the initial build and save considerably more when something needs attention later.
The clean cable management guide covers the full process in practical detail for builds at different stages of complexity.
A handbrake, sequential shifter or additional input devices are natural additions to a setup at this level. Adding a shifter and handbrake mount during the initial build is cleaner than retrofitting into a finished rig. Having the mounting point in place means the expansion happens in minutes rather than requiring a partial disassembly.
Pairing the cockpit with a solid monitor stand that stays fixed to the frame keeps your eyepoint consistent between sessions and removes one of the quieter sources of variability from the setup.
Browse the products in this compatibility collection above, or start at sim racing cockpits to compare all rig tiers and find the right foundation for your UDFP20 build.
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Alle gegevens bekijkenTake a guided path to your ideal simulator with personalization options at every step.
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