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netKar Pro debuted at a fair held in Lanciano (), February 24–26, 2006.Version 1.0 was released for download on April 10, 2006. Developers worked with companies involved in real car racing such as Sparco (design of steering wheels, helmets, and driving suits), AIM Sportline [2] (official and fully functional AIM data acquisition systems are reproduced in netKar Pro), Cooper/AVON tires, [3 ...
One of the earliest racing wheels for the PC mass market was the Thrustmaster Formula T1, released in 1994. [1] [2] It had no force feedback, only some form of spring-based centering resistance proportional to the steering angle. [3] Two of the earliest FFB wheels for the consumer PC market were the Microsoft Sidewinder Force Feedback Wheel, [4 ...
Thrustmaster is an American designer, developer and manufacturer of joysticks, game controllers, and steering wheels for PCs and video gaming consoles. It has licensing agreements with third party brands as Airbus, Boeing, Ferrari, Gran Turismo and U.S. Air Force as well as licensing some products under Sony's PlayStation and Microsoft's Xbox licenses.
In a direct drive simracing steering wheel system, the wheelbase and the wheel rim are typically separate, so that is possible to switch between rims according to the use case, for instance formula wheelrims, GT wheelrims, oval racing or truck wheel rims. The base and the rim are typically connected through a quick release system.
The Microsoft SideWinder Force Feedback Wheel is a steering wheel controller for sim racing. It was the first wheel controller to contain force feedback. [ 14 ] The USB version of the wheel is compatible with one PlayStation 2 game, Tokyo Xtreme Racer Zero .
Xbox One Kinect. Kinect (Codename "Project Natal", Model 1520) is a "controller-free gaming and entertainment experience" produced by Microsoft for the Xbox One. Based on an add-on peripheral for the console, it enables users to control and interact with the Xbox One with spoken commands, motions, gestures, or presented objects and images.
3-axis joystick, 12 buttons (one in trigger position), 4-way hat, throttle: No: Buttons 1-6 are located on stick with 2-5 being accessible to thumb in normal holding position, throttle slider is easily held by the thumb when fingers of left hand are placed over buttons 7-12: Freedom 2.4 Cordless 2002: PC: RF 2.4 GHz: 3×AA
The Xbox 360 Wireless Racing Wheel was discontinued in 2007 when the price of the wheel was dropped to $99. It no longer seemed to be supplied to stores, and Microsoft had removed mention of it from the official Xbox web site. The successor, the Microsoft Xbox 360 Wireless Speed Wheel was released on September 26, 2011. [5]