$2M vs. $63,000: Luxury Racing Simulators
Read more: https://more-deals.info/story/dynisma-worlds-most-expensive-racing-simulator-tested/%3C/a%3E%3Cbr%3E%3Cbr%3EDirector: Anna O'Donohue
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and I write about luxury tech for Wired.
And today, I'm testing two machines in the racing sim space.
I wanna find out exactly what you get when you spend 60k
[classical music] [bell dinging]
versus a $2 million machine like this.
So why are we looking at racing simulators?
Well, motor racing is a rich boys' club.
You need to be loaded, or from a loaded family anyway,
But racing simulators democratize this space.
People like Jann Mardenborough,
have now broken into the pro racing world for real.
Right, let's go and test the 60,000 pound
It's the most beautiful racing sim I've ever seen.
It's designed by the guy who designed Jaguars,
It's made of the materials that they used
If this isn't luxury tech, then I don't know what is!
We're in a very lucky person's garage
and this is the Prodrive Racing Simulator.
So the main feature here of the Prodrive Simulator
is the bent beech frame that goes all the way around
and that is holding the suspended
You've got the shutoff power button
and then this button here turns the PC,
which is hidden in the nose, on and off.
Then inside, you've got the racing steering wheel,
And that, with the super wide screen,
for a luxurious home racing simulator.
I've gotta be careful because a very kind Prodrive customer
I'm gonna try and get in very gingerly. Here we go.
Oh, it's comfy! [seat whirring]
so you can only adjust the pedals
once you're actually sitting down in the seat.
Okay, already getting some feedback from the wheel.
Pedals are good. The pedals feel authentic.
Nice and stiff, as it would be, in the racing pit.
The screen is wide enough really,
to be almost at the edges of my field of view.
It's got really strong buttons
that you would get on a racing car for changing gear.
I mean, basically it feels like a really expensive Xbox.
With the Prodrive, the luxury element here
is about as much about the design as the driving experience.
It's probably more about how this machine looks
and how it can be part of your luxury home experience.
So the Prodrive, and undoubtedly a beautiful thing.
But the trouble with it was it's like a rich boys' toy.
The pedals, the steering wheel, the cabinet,
that's all something that you could possibly replicate
at home for a few hundred bucks.
It's not really pushing the envelope.
I look at luxury tech like this.
between price, design, and innovation,
and that middle sweet spot, where all those converge.
That's Wired luxury. But, there's a catch.
You've gotta consider the law of diminishing returns.
And this states that the value you get decreases
You spend 500 bucks on a Sonos speaker,
a high-end speaker will cost 200 times that,
but it'll only be 20 times better.
As we're looking at two luxury racing sims,
the Prodrive will be up at the top here,
The $2 million Dynisma will be all the way along at the end.
So I wanna see what the Dynisma is like.
And this is F1 grade that you can now buy yourself.
Ferrari has one, for heaven's sake.
For a few million, you can have one too!
And I want to know what that's like.
The clever thing about it, the innovation is the latency,
the delay in inputs for using the racing simulator.
They've managed to get their racing sim down
Most of the time they're 50 milliseconds or 60,
This thing costs up to $12.6 million.
And yes, you will be able to get one of these
The secret to why this is so realistic.
This is the rig that allows it to move around.
I shouldn't be able to do this on a normal simulator rig,
but because it's so low friction, look, I can,
That's how low the friction is on this.
And then you've got the carbon fiber tub, an F4 tub.
The pedals that you reach through to around here
are actually higher than your lower body in the seat,
so you've got that different driving position.
we've got a massive wrap-around screen.
So I'm gonna try this out now to see how it really performs.
It does actually feel like you're there.
Mind you, the brakes are unbelievable.
God, is this what it's really like
to drive in a Formula car round Monaco?
Yeah! We're never gonna make that chicane.
No, no, that's again, did it again.
I can't make that, that's ridiculous.
I'm feeling absolutely humbled, really.
Very quickly, you feel like you're actually there.
you can feel the back end of the car going out.
The acceleration is absolutely phenomenal.
All you can see is this massive screen.
And I have no idea how humans drive faster
than that round this course, basically.
The thing is, Dynisma is so pro,
that I don't think I can test it all on my own.
We need a pro racing sim driver, and that is George.
George is not only a pro racing sim driver,
he's also a pro driver in the real world.
This is mega. [George laughing]
This feels amazing. Oh, it's feeling really good.
you feel everything on the rear of the car.
Every time I go over a curb, it feels so realistic.
and I've never experienced a sim like this before
it was training my brain that this is real.
The more I'm going around now,
the more visually and mentally my brain's accepting it.
And this is quite easily the closest
I think my heart rate is probably,
I'm even sharing these right now.
They've just changed the settings for George,
giving him less grip on the tires, because annoyingly,
he's doing much better than I was.
The value of this system is evident here.
Look at everything that's taking place here
to make this as realistic as you possibly can.
The structure there providing information to the driver
at incredibly low latency, three to four milliseconds,
all the grease movement, the massive screen,
this is where the van has gone, and this,
if you look at that graph of how much you get,
this is right on the end of that graph.
That's how much money you have to get and spend
and develop to actually get something
Are there any parts of driving around the track
that particularly stood out for you?
I think I definitely struggled a little bit at first
because that sense of speed is there, unlike at home,
and you go from hundreds of miles an hour,
down to like really slow speeds in a second on the brake.
So I definitely struggled with those tight hairpins.
But then after a few laps, just the feeling,
everything about this sim just made it feel
a lot more natural and I was able to get to grips of it.
How much do you reckon it would improve your driving?
I think it would help so much,
just in terms of learning the track,
learning the characteristics of the car,
and then apply it to the real world
and I think that's where the market is,
and that's what's gonna be a game changer.
The things that strike me about this simulator
is that it is really is super realistic.
You really do feel like you're driving.
Yes, it's massively expensive,
but the value here is the money's all in that machine there.
but the experience is priceless, really.
So testing over, and what have we learned?
Well, we've learned that luxury tech is very expensive.
But the difference between the Prodrive and the Dynisma
is that Prodrive is going for aesthetic
Dynisma is really trying to push the boundaries forward.
Go back to that Venn diagram. Design, money, innovation,
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