{"id":50233,"date":"2026-02-11T09:00:44","date_gmt":"2026-02-11T07:00:44","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/simucube.com\/en-us\/?p=50233"},"modified":"2026-02-05T08:27:25","modified_gmt":"2026-02-05T06:27:25","slug":"simucube-trusted-by-professionals","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/simucube.com\/en-us\/partnership-case-studies\/simucube-trusted-by-professionals\/","title":{"rendered":"Trusted by pros: Simucube for professional driver training"},"content":{"rendered":"
Trusted force feedback and pedals are essential in simulators used for professional driver training.<\/p>\n
At the professional level, training isn\u2019t just about doing more laps. It\u2019s about making every lap count. Learning a new circuit faster. Refining references. Repeating performance until it becomes automatic. All of these goals depend on the same thing: maximizing the value of every lap.<\/p>\n
That\u2019s exactly why sim racing has become a real part of professional driver training and why professional motorsport and sim racing athletes trust Simucube products at the center of their rigs.<\/p>\n
Across disciplines and series, the pattern is the same: when the simulator becomes a training tool and not just entertainment, the hardware has to be consistent, adjustable, and reliable enough to disappear from your thoughts.<\/p>\n
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Tatiana Calderon\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n For Tatiana Calder\u00f3n<\/strong> (IMSA SportsCar Championship), sim racing became essential when international racing meant constant new environments and limited track time.<\/p>\n \u201cSim racing been crucial to learn new tracks and speed up the process to maximize track time.\u201d<\/em> \u2014 Tatiana Calder\u00f3n<\/strong><\/p>\n That ability to arrive prepared is what makes sim racing so powerful for pros in motorsports: you\u2019re not starting from zero on Friday morning. You\u2019re building a foundation before you even get the car on the track.<\/p>\n For Tim Heinemann<\/strong> (GT driver \/ Virtual DTM Champion), that preparation goes beyond track knowledge. It\u2019s a broader performance tool.<\/p>\n \u201cSim racing is more than just learning the tracks. It\u2019s about learning how to become a racing driver.\u201d<\/em> \u2014 Tim Heinemann<\/strong><\/p>\n Force feedback and pedals in professional sim racing training<\/p>\n In real cars, your body is flooded with information. In a simulator, a lot of that disappears and what\u2019s left has to come through your hands and feet. Here the wheelbase and sim racing pedals play a crucial role.<\/p>\n That\u2019s where high-end force feedback and pedal feel stop being \u201cnice to have\u201d and start becoming the training itself.<\/p>\n For drifting, where feel and car control are everything, Mika Keski-Korpi<\/strong> points straight to the core value:<\/p>\n \u201cFeedback from the wheelbase is essential for training.\u201d<\/em> \u2014 Mika Keski-Korpi<\/strong><\/p>\n For endurance and GT-style racing, being able to concentrate fully without second-guessing the equipment is the difference between chasing pace and building it. Tim puts it simply:<\/p>\n \u201cI can always rely on Simucube equipment. This allows me to fully focus on driving.\u201d<\/em> \u2014 Tim Heinemann<\/strong><\/p>\n Tim Heinemann<\/em><\/p>\n The best training isn\u2019t a single hero lap. It\u2019s repeatability. It\u2019s building a routine that delivers the same quality every session and hardware that behaves the same way, every time. And, in racing simulators consistency is everything.<\/p>\n James Baldwin<\/strong> (GT driver and sim racer) highlights this from the perspective of someone operating at the sharp end of competitive grids:<\/p>\n \u201cFor me, the greatest thing about Simucube products is the reliability. I\u2019ve personally never had a single issue\u201d<\/em> \u2014 James Baldwin<\/strong><\/p>\n That reliability isn\u2019t just convenience. It protects your focus. It keeps your practice clean. It means your progress is driven by your inputs not by guesswork or inconsistency.<\/p>\n And when sim racing becomes part of your professional driver training, the smallest advantages compound. James describes why detail matters in top-level competition:<\/p>\n \u201cIn the highest level of sim racing, when the grid is separated by a few tenths, every tiny detail counts.\u201d<\/em> \u2014 James Baldwin<\/strong><\/p>\n James Baldwin<\/em><\/p>\n For many professional drivers, the real proof is what changes over time: faster learning, sharper references, better control, and clearer direction when you arrive at the track.<\/p>\n Tatiana describes how sim racing helps her build that clarity before real laps begin:<\/p>\n \u201cIt\u2019s a short cut to get more familiar with settings, track references and understand areas to work on when we get to the real car and track.\u201d<\/em> \u2014 Tatiana Calder\u00f3n<\/strong><\/p>\n Mika\u2019s perspective is equally blunt: good equipment plus intentional sim training can translate into real-world improvement.<\/p>\n \u201cYear after I started to do sim training with good equipment and with a plan I was the most improved driver in the whole Drift Masters\u201d<\/em> \u2014 Mika Keski-Korpi<\/strong><\/p>\n Mika Keski-Korpi<\/em><\/p>\n These drivers don\u2019t choose gear for hype. They choose what helps them prepare: equipment they can rely on, feedback that makes sense, and adjustability that supports different cars, tracks, and disciplines.<\/p>\n Or, as James sums it up:<\/p>\n \u201cSimucube is the pinnacle of sim racing equipment, whether it’s for esports or real-world racing preparation\u201d<\/em> \u2014 James Baldwin<\/strong><\/p>\n If you\u2019re building your own training setup, that\u2019s the takeaway: choose hardware that disappears into the background and gives you the confidence to focus on what matters.<\/p>\n A quick look at what these pros use as part of their training:<\/p>\n Tatiana Calder\u00f3n (@tatacalde7)<\/a><\/p>\n Mika Keski-Korpi (@keskikorpimotorsport)<\/a><\/p>\n James Baldwin (@jaaamesbaldwin)<\/a><\/p>\n Tim Heinemann (@tim.heinemann)<\/a><\/p>\n Simucube athletes, racers, and teams<\/a><\/p>\n James Baldwin (GT driver, sim racer) case study<\/a><\/p>\n Tim Heinemann (GT driver) case study<\/a><\/p>\n Simucube Link Platform: Turning complex sim racing setup into one predictable system<\/a><\/p>\n Simucube 2: Legendary wheelbase, built to last<\/a><\/p>\nProfessional driver training: Sim time that translates into track time<\/h2>\n
<\/p>\nConsistency is the hidden advantage<\/h2>\n
<\/p>\nA simulator that helps you improve constantly<\/h2>\n
<\/p>\nSimucube \u2014 Trusted by pros for professional driver training<\/h2>\n
<\/p>\nSim racing setups chosen by professionals<\/h2>\n
Tatiana Calder\u00f3n (IMSA sportscars championship, Single seaters, and Sportscars)<\/strong><\/h3>\n
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Mika Keski-Korpi (Drift Masters, drifting)<\/strong><\/h3>\n
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James Baldwin (GT World Challenge Europe, sim racing, and real-world sports car racing)<\/strong><\/h3>\n
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Tim Heinemann (GT World Challenge, 24h N\u00fcrburgring, GT3, and DTM)<\/strong><\/h3>\n
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Learn more about pro drivers<\/h2>\n
Read more blogs<\/h2>\n