Paul Jeffrey
Premium
This thread is for the general discussion of the item GT Omega PRIME Aluminium Profile Cockpit. Please add to the discussion here.
I think Ikea did extremely well to take all the abuse I threw at it, as I finally had to throw it out, it was over 20 years old. It didn't take much to dismantle it, as it had so many holes in it, it had no stability any more. It practically fell apart, with a little help from a big hammerHey, sometimes Ikea actually makes good stuff! The Poang chair for example, its legendary in simracing bodge jobs. When I build my rig, I went searching for a tablet holder for my 'button box'. I never found anything that was cheap and good until I went through Ikea with my wife (the relationship test) and found a wooden tablet holder which was perfect for the job. Price? £1,5. So dont knock on Ikea! Sometimes Swedes get something right...
The prices seem to be in line with similar offerings from SimLab and other rigs made from 80/20 or similar. The TrakRacer stuff is even more expensive. I started with a GTOmega Wheel Stand, then later added the rear section, RS6 Seat, Single Monitor Stand, Keyboard Tray, Handbrake Mount. By the time I add all that up, I could have got a decent 80/20 setup (without a seat).Extruded aluminium, not steel Still too expensive for what it is though.
The sim rig at Motedis costs €278.00, without seat. The 80/20 extruded profiles are just industry norm parts, to the DIN standard, all in a modular system. SimLab, Trakracer, and the others are more expensive because first of all they take advantage of the fact that people think that the material is some kind of cutting-edge unobtainium, when in fact the parts are made of an aluminium alloy, and part of a modular system that is used to build hundred of different things, from storage systems to bookshelves, and, secondly, because they save you the trouble of having to work out which parts, how long, what fittings etc. But there are free programs where you can do that yourself with a CAD-type program and save a lot of money.The prices seem to be in line with similar offerings from SimLab and other rigs made from 80/20 or similar. The TrakRacer stuff is even more expensive. I started with a GTOmega Wheel Stand, then later added the rear section, RS6 Seat, Single Monitor Stand, Keyboard Tray, Handbrake Mount. By the time I add all that up, I could have got a decent 80/20 setup (without a seat).
I started reading your previous post but got distracted and somehow came back half way through this post and said to myself "WTF, what kind of simrig has drawers?!"Me too, I started with an old Ikea desk that my daughters used to do their homework when they were younger. In the end, before I bought my Rig, it had more holes than a Swiss cheese from mounting different things, no drawers anymore (built a tray for the shifter where they went), and had to be stiffened all over the place with metal Strips, because eventually the Ikea quality started to come through in a bad way
I don't know what you've been smoking, but could you please send me some?I started reading your previous post but got distracted and somehow came back half way through this post and said to myself "WTF, what kind of simrig has drawers?!"
$1300 for an aluminum frame and seat.
$2000 avg. For a DD wheel
$500-1500 for pedals
$600 + for a new vr headset
$1000+ for 3080 gpu
Roughly another $1000 for all the other pc parts.
I'm smoking a lidl flat pack cabinet.I don't know what you've been smoking, but could you please send me some?
I think it's becoming clear that sim racers are one of those A rated consumers. Many of us are adults with money to spend. We're probably in a similar bracket to golfers, we want the fancy gear because we think it will improve our game. Expect to see more and more companies try and get into the market offering everything from under priced junk to over priced junk.$1000 Canadian for a couple pieces of aluminum without a seat?
The whole sim racing/pc is so ridiculously overpriced now.
You've described the absolute top end there, it's still more than possible to enjoy sim racing with a great experience on budget far smaller than that.
I like mountain biking, and could easily spend £6K + on a carbon full suspension top end MTB if I wanted, but I'm more than happy on my £800 hard tail. I think it's great there is a lot of choice now days in top middle and bottom ends of the scale...
Good points, I haven't looked at the Motedis, but I can't be bothered to make one myself. I understand its all the same 80/20 profile stuff at the end of the day. However I neither have the time, patience, tools or skills to do it, and when you have a parent with Alzheimer's to look after as well ad your day job, I want my time spent enjoying the rig rather than having to make it and I am prepared to pay for it.The sim rig at Motedis costs €278.00, without seat. The 80/20 extruded profiles are just industry norm parts, to the DIN standard, all in a modular system. SimLab, Trakracer, and the others are more expensive because first of all they take advantage of the fact that people think that the material is some kind of cutting-edge unobtainium, when in fact the parts are made of an aluminium alloy, and part of a modular system that is used to build hundred of different things, from storage systems to bookshelves, and, secondly, because they save you the trouble of having to work out which parts, how long, what fittings etc. But there are free programs where you can do that yourself with a CAD-type program and save a lot of money.
But the system from GT Omega is a rip-off. It is at least twice the price it should be, and €300.00 extra for black eloxy coating is just taking the p*ss. I drive VR, what colour the rig is is irrelevant, I can't see it anyway when I'm driving.
It's a bit like Stevie Wonder deciding what colour the new curtains should be
Good point about the black version, but as you said that you hadn't looked at the Motedis kit, I can tell you that it is a finished kit with everything you need to put it together. In that respect, they're all the same: you get a an assortment of 20/80 extrusions that've been cut to exact length, and a huge pile of fittings.Good points, I haven't looked at the Motedis, but I can't be bothered to make one myself. I understand its all the same 80/20 profile stuff at the end of the day. However I neither have the time, patience, tools or skills to do it, and when you have a parent with Alzheimer's to look after as well ad your day job, I want my time spent enjoying the rig rather than having to make it and I am prepared to pay for it.
The same goes for my car. Can I wash it myself, service it myself, etc? Yes. Can I be bothered to do it? No. I prefer to spend what time I have doing things I enjoy. But I certainly get it that some people will get a lot of pleasure and satisfaction on building it themselves.
Whilst I also play in VR, I think the Black 80/20 rigs look so much better than the silver. But each to their own though. It would be a boring world if we all agreed on everything
Yes, I don't mind the assembly bit, that could be quite fun and wouldn't require much more than a few Allen Keys and Screw Drivers or Spanners. I wouldn't be able to get a fully assembled rig through the door and up the stairs! It would be like people trying to get a grand piano into a upper storey flat, using a block and tackle to winch it up and through a window. Thanks for the tip on the Motedis kit. It is seriously cheap by comparison.Good point about the black version, but as you said that you hadn't looked at the Motedis kit, I can tell you that it is a finished kit with everything you need to put it together. In that respect, they're all the same: you get a an assortment of 20/80 extrusions that've been cut to exact length, and a huge pile of fittings.
All you need to assemble it is two to three hours and a few hand tools.
If you ever want to buy a 20/80 kit, from whichever company, you're going to have to assemble it. AFAIK, no one delivers them fully assembled. Actually, that'd be quite a good idea for people with no time, or two left hands: like buying a fitted kitchen
Or the GT Omega is seriously overpriced, whichever way you look at it. With Motedis you have to pay extra for a seat, but that's the case with GT Omega too, and their seats are carp, mine is splitting along all the seams after two years use.Yes, I don't mind the assembly bit, that could be quite fun and wouldn't require much more than a few Allen Keys and Screw Drivers or Spanners. I wouldn't be able to get a fully assembled rig through the door and up the stairs! It would be like people trying to get a grand piano into a upper storey flat, using a block and tackle to winch it up and through a window. Thanks for the tip on the Motedis kit. It is seriously cheap by comparison.
I fancy a Sparco seat anyway, so thats not a problem.Or the GT Omega is seriously overpriced, whichever way you look at it. With Motedis you have to pay extra for a seat, but that's the case with GT Omega too, and their seats are carp, mine is splitting along all the seams after two years use.
When it goes totally fits up, I'm going to buy a Sparco, and use the fittings from the GT Omega RS9
I used aluminium profile to make a fabrication jig at work, must be 15-20 years ago now. I used 50x50 and the issue we had was it would just rattle itself apart over time, the bolts just wouldn't hold. That experience has made me apprehensive about using profile. But if your using it for a motion rig it must have gotten better over the years. The wider profile gave me the impression it would hold up better over time simply because there's more fixings and surface area to hold everything in place.Look I have 40x40, and no flex!