WheelStation Review

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I'm putting this together for those who were thinking of buying the WheelStation to go with their DFP's (www.capitoldiecast.com).

The WheelStation has an upside and a downside, and oddly enough, they're both caused by the same thing.

The upside: Those of you worried about stability needn't bother.. this thing ain't going nowhere. Not necessarily because of it's design, but because of it's sheer size.. this thing is bigger than the pictures on the site would lead you to believe. A LOT bigger. Make no mistake, this thing is ****ing huge. The base is over two feet wide on each side.. you'd have to physically push it (hard) to get it to fall over. There's a tiny bit of side-to-side wobble, but that's a side effect of the design, and the wobble is very minimal. The top portion is also very sturdy.. latch the DFP on, and it ain't going anywhere.

The downside: This thing is ****ing huge. It's so big, in fact, that I can't use it on my couch, as shown in the pictures on the site. If you have a rather high couch with very stiff cushions, you could probably do it. But my couch sits a little lower, and it's also very soft. When you sit down, your butt sinks about five or six inches. Quite comfy. On the flip side, it puts the DFP at about eye-level... I feel like one of those blue-haired old ladies when I'm trying to drive from the couch, craning my neck up to see over the wheel, or driving from one side of the wheel. Uh-uh. I actually had to pull in a chair from my back porch just to drive from a reasonable height.

It's not just a stand.. it's a piece of furniture. I have to rearrange my living room just to drive, moving my coffee table to one side of the room just to make room for the chair and the stand. Which is why the thing is currently sitting in a closet.. there's just nowhere to put it in the living room when I'm not actually driving with it.

The size inadvertantly causes another problem, as well, depending on how your living room is set up. Because of how far I have to have it away from the wall, I'm stretching the power cord to it's limit (from behind the couch, all the way past the lawn chair and up to the DFP). Depending on your living room, you may or may not have this problem.

The only other downside I noticed was the small "lip" on the back of the base, which is designed to keep the pedals from sliding off. In that aspect, it works very well, but the DFP's pedal cable comes from the back of the pedals.. that cable get crammed up against this "lip" when you drive, and could concievably cause connection problems with extended use. I'm thinking of adding some sort of "buffer" to that lip to allow the cord to sit freely rather than having it crimped every time I play.

The pedals will still "lift" with hard pressure to the brake (those of you with a DFP know what I mean), but that's a fault of the DFP itself and not the WheelStation. A bit of duct tape along the front edge of the pedals should solve this.

But on the whole, I'm actually happy with the purchase. The WheelStation is pretty cheap (only $50, which is half what you'll pay for something much flimsier on Ebay), and it is much better than what I had before. With the DFP latched onto my coffee table, I felt like Andre the Giant driving a VW Beetle, hunched forward to grab a wheel that was only a foot or so above the pedals beneath it. The only real downside to it is the sheer size of the thing, which may or may not be a factor depending on the size of your couch (for the record, I'm of "average" height and build.. around 5'10-11", 160lbs). I'm thinking of actually reducing it's height by cutting six or eight inches from the main supports so I can drive from the couch, but I'll need more tools to do so (currently lacking things like a saw and a drill). But, as I said, on the plus side, the size does make it VERY stable.. there's no way in hell you could call this thing "flimsy".
 
I'm very pleased with my Wheelstation. I have tried using it with a chair and have come to the conclusion that it's shipped designed to be used with a standard couch. The height of a typical office chair, even if you lean it back a bit, isn't quite right for the Wheelstation.

I tried using the Wheelstation with a chair and moving my coffee table totally out of the room and was disappointed. Finally I decided to use the less than stellar back support my couch offered and was very pleasantly suprised at how well it worked, and with minimum living room re-arrangement!

After extended rally race sessions, I sometimes need to take a screwdriver and tighten up some of the screws but for the most part it's easy to adjust. It was a bit larger than I thought it would be, and after all it IS 20lbs worth of wood and screws. I just fold mine up and put in in a closet when I'm done with it. I do have to move my coffee table a bit closer to the TV to get it to fit when I want to play GT4, and my TV is about 7 ft from the couch itself.

Anyway, I can't use the wheel and pedals without some re-arrangment of the living room with the nice big TV, but that's gonna be your case with any setup consisting of a wheel and pedals. The wife isn't going to like a mass of cables attached to a whirring wheel and pedals no matter if it's on a $2000 cockpit rig or if it's slammed to a $70 Target coffee table. At least with the Wheelstation, I can take a minute to slightly rearrange the living room and play in comfort, and the whole setup breaks down in literally a minute.

If your power cable and/or USB cable are too short to reach your couch, that's a problem with your setup in the room, not a fault of the Wheelstation or the DFP. The Wheelstation adds very little to the cable length requirements.

Likewise, although it would be handy to sand a "groove" in the stop-bar for the pedal cable to snake through, you won't have to worry about the cable degrading to a point of non-use if you don't. If you look under your DFP pedals, there's a hidden switch that extends a little carpet-hugger spike attachment thing, and you can always add a tiny strip of carpet or velcro on the base itself to prevent slippage if you're concerned about cable wear and tear. Personally, I think if you're truly tromping on those pedals enough to potentially fray or break the cable then you either need to adjust your driving abilities or cut your own hole in the stop-bar, at your desired pedal position.

My personal adjustment (being 5' 9" tall) is that I slide it closer to me until the left post hits my left knee, then advance it forward to the TV about another 3-4 inches. I also place the stand off center to the left of the TV so it mimics my perspective of being in the driver's seat a little better.

However it is extremely comfortable and cost effective. You must keep in mind that this is an accessory and getting it will not magically make you a better driver. It will prevent you from totally re-arranging your living room with a card table and office chair like you had to do before you got it, and you will be a better driver using this item instead of hunching the over the DFP mounted on a coffee table.

For the price you just can't go wrong. For most couches the angles are just right, and it's pretty sturdy.
 
I've had my Wheelstation since mid-last week and love it. Yeah it's big, but it is sturdy, and that's what counts to me. I think it's funny to see people saying "don't spend 50, build your own", when 99% of the time they spend the same amount if not more to build one. For the pedal cord problem, I just put my pedals a little off center so the cord goes to the side to the barrier strip. Works great and is comfortable.
 
I bought this 2 years ago in winter
but however maybe it was too cold during the shipping
the base was blended and I couldn't install it
and I think the quality is okay, not saying that because it was blended
... because I was expecting it would have smoother surface
 
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