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A wheel hub sits at the center of your steering setup. It determines how many wheel rims you can use, how flexible your rig becomes, and how future-proof your investment is.
For Fanatec, that matters enormously.
Because the more useful the hub becomes, the more valuable the entire Fanatec ecosystem becomes.
But hubs often determine whether an ecosystem feels frustrating… or brilliant.
This new Fanatec Wheel Hub feels like one of those products that may not trend as hard on day one—but months from now people may realize it was one of Fanatec’s smartest moves.
It supports customization. It supports loyalty. It supports future upgrades. And it supports racers who want one setup that can do everything.
That’s why I believe this release could be a genuine game changer for Fanatec.
Final Verdict
The new Fanatec Wheel Hub may not be the flashiest product launch of the year.
But it could be one of the most important.
Because when you improve the center of the system… everything connected to it gets stronger.
FTC Disclosure: This article contains affiliate links. If you purchase through them, I may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. That helps support independent sim racing reviews and content.
Just got word from Pimax about something pretty cool that’s happening right now.
They’re not treating us like regular customers anymore. Pimax is opening up the whole platform and inviting real users—like you and me—to step up as builders, testers, and active community members who actually help shape the future of VR.
When you grab a Crystal Super QLED during this special event, you’re not just buying a headset. You’re joining a crew of innovators who are working together to create new VR experiences, accessories, and improvements.
Here’s what you get during the campaign:
Save $200 on the Crystal Super QLED — special event pricing drops it to $1,599 (regularly $1,799)
Extra 2% off with my code SKSimracing
Instant access to the official Pimax Discord community
Opportunities to join feedback sessions and beta testing
Use Pimax’s resources to help develop new VR accessories or experiences
Become a real part of the development journey instead of just watching from the sidelines
This is exactly the kind of move that keeps me excited about Pimax. They’re listening to the sim racing crowd and giving us a real voice in what comes next.
If you’re already thinking about leveling up from the Crystal Light (or jumping straight into the higher-end game), now’s a killer time to pull the trigger on the Crystal Super.
Just remember to use code SKSimracing at checkout for that extra 2% off on top of the $200 savings.
Affiliate Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. If you purchase through them, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend gear I actually use and believe in.
After putting the Podium DD through multiple NASCAR league races, it was clear this wheelbase needs real race distance to understand what it can actually do.
The Podium DD is the wheelbase I’ve wanted to put through a true NASCAR-style test: long runs, worn tires, changing track conditions, and the kind of subtle steering feel that matters when you’re trying to save the right-front over a 40-lap green flag run.
So instead of unboxing it and immediately calling it “amazing,” I put it into the environment I know best.
Over the last 4 hours, I’ve used the Fanatec Podium DD in three Tuesday night league races driving the NASCAR Next Gen Cup Car in iRacing.
And so far?
It has been incredibly impressive.
If you want to see the same wheelbase I’m testing, you can check out the Fanatec Podium DD here: https://fanatec.sjv.io/aOvQYj
The First Thing I Noticed: Fidelity
The biggest difference between the Podium DD and the other wheelbases I’ve driven is the fidelity.
The force feedback is not just strong. It is detailed.
The Podium DD has an ability to communicate exactly what the car and track are doing without ever feeling harsh or exaggerated. Through the wheel, I could feel:
Cracks and seams in the racing surface
Small grooves developing in the preferred line
The front tires beginning to slide before the car fully stepped out
The difference between clean air and turbulent air entering the corner
The subtle unloading of the front end over bumps
What surprised me most is that all of this detail comes through while still feeling extremely smooth.
Some high-torque wheelbases can feel raw, sharp, or overly aggressive. The Podium DD does not. It has a refined feel to it. Smooth when the car is settled, but alive with information the moment the car begins to move around.
That combination of smoothness and realism is what immediately stood out in these first few races.
If you have been considering an upgrade and want more detail without sacrificing smoothness, the Podium DD is worth a serious look: https://fanatec.sjv.io/aOvQYj
Why NASCAR Next Gen Cars Are the Perfect Test
The NASCAR Next Gen Cup Car is one of the best cars for testing a wheelbase.
Unlike a GT3 car where the steering can sometimes feel heavier and more planted, the Next Gen car constantly moves around underneath you. The steering gets lighter in dirty air, heavier on corner entry, and you can often feel the front tires start to give up long before you see it happen.
That means a wheelbase either communicates those changes clearly… or it doesn’t.
The Podium DD communicates them exceptionally well.
In all three races, I found myself catching small slides sooner and being more confident driving right on the edge of grip. Instead of reacting after the car started to get loose, I could feel the beginning of the slide through the wheel.
That may not sound dramatic, but over the course of a long race, that kind of information matters.
It helps you:
Save tires – Drive closer to the limit
Catch the car sooner when it starts to rotate
Be more consistent over a long run
Those are the kinds of differences that can turn a top-10 car into a top-5 car.
My Early Thoughts Compared to Other Fanatec Wheelbases
I’ve spent a lot of time with other Fanatec wheelbases, including the ClubSport DD+ and previous Fanatec direct drive systems.
So far, the Podium DD feels like it combines the best parts of those wheelbases into one package.
It has:
The smoothness of the newer Fanatec direct drive systems
More texture and detail than I expected
Incredible stability during long green-flag runs
Enough torque that it never feels like it is running out of headroom
Even after multiple races, the wheelbase remained consistent. There was no sense of fading, clipping, or changing feel as the session went on.
That is especially important in NASCAR racing, where the car changes dramatically from lap 1 to lap 40.
This Is Just the Beginning
After only 4 hours, I’m not ready to call this a full review yet.
This is the first chapter in what will be a full series of articles on the Fanatec Podium DD.
Over the next few weeks, I’ll be testing:
NASCAR Next Gen on short tracks, intermediates, and superspeedways
iRacing oval and road course performance
Comparison testing against the ClubSport DD+
How the Podium DD feels with different wheels and settings
Long-run comfort and fatigue
QR2 performance and wheel-side options
Whether the Podium DD is worth the upgrade for serious sim racers
I also want to answer the question many NASCAR and iRacing drivers are asking:
Is the Podium DD simply stronger than the ClubSport DD+, or is it genuinely better?
So far, based on these first three league races, I think the answer may be yes.
But I want more laps before I make that call.
If you want to follow along as I continue testing, be sure to keep checking SKSimRacing.com. I’ll be sharing setup tips, detailed comparisons, race-by-race impressions, and a full technical review once I have more time behind the wheel.
And if you are already considering the Fanatec Podium DD, you can see the exact wheelbase I’m testing here: https://fanatec.sjv.io/aOvQYj
Final Verdict After 4 Hours
After 4 hours and 3 NASCAR Next Gen Cup league races, my first impression is simple:
The Fanatec Podium DD feels special.
It delivers the kind of fidelity, realism, and confidence that makes you want to stay in the simulator for “just one more race.”
That is usually the sign that a piece of sim racing hardware is doing something right.
FTC Disclosure: SKSimRacing.com uses affiliate links. If you purchase through the links above, I may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. That support helps me continue creating honest reviews, detailed comparisons, and NASCAR-focused sim racing content.