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Le Mans Ultimate Simucube 2 Settings Guide

It’s time to give you the ultimate Simucube settings for Le Mans Ultimate.

The Simucube 2 lineup has been with us for six years, and although the next generation is on the horizon, it still keeps a strong presence in the direct drive wheelbase market.

Simucube offers three wheelbases: Sport, Pro and the now-discontinued Ultimate. All of them have been the benchmark for high-tier sim racing setups. The FFB is clean, powerful and remarkably natural; the build quality is robust. Branding is subtle and classy: just a couple of logos visible from the cockpit, with no flashy LEDs or aggressive styling cues.

About Simucube 2 Wheelbases

The 17 Nm Sport is the ideal entry point into high-end sim racing, offering a significant step up from mid-range options such as the CSL DD. While you may notice some minor limitations in responsiveness and detail, it still provides more than enough performance for the majority of sim racers.

The 25 Nm Pro remains a true endgame product and the perfect balance between the Sport and the Ultimate. The jump from Sport to Pro gives you an 8 Nm increase for only 240 euros more. By contrast, the upgrade from Pro to Ultimate adds just 7 Nm for staggering 1,700 euros.

The 32 Nm Ultimate is discontinued and available only on the aftermarket. It is an overkill for almost all users, because the practical gains are limited for the price.

Every Advantage needed for LMU

Setting Up Your Simucube 2 Wheelbase in Le Mans Ultimate

Connect your wheelbase, launch LMU, load a race session and go to Settings > Controls > Wheel & Pedals menu.

SettingsValue
Calibrate settings
Use Steering Wheel Range from VehicleOn
Use Steering Wheel Maximum Rotation from DriverOn
Force Feedback settings
Force Feedback EffectsOn
Invert Force FeedbackOn
Force Feedback Strength50-70%. You may need to set it lower if you own the Ultimate
Force Feedback Smoothing0-5. Higher value if you dislike vibrations from flatspots, curbs, track surface, etc.
Minimum Steering Torque0%
Collision Strength50-100%. Lower strength is safer for your wrists during crashes
Steering Torque Sensitivity100-150%. Higher value if you want more feedback at lower speeds
Use Constant Steering Force EffectOff

Simucube Software Settings for Le Mans Ultimate

Simucube originally launched the True Drive software, which remains supported, but has since introduced Tuner.

Tuner is the newer, unified platform for managing all Simucube devices. The software is well-designed and easy to navigate, with extensive settings for strength, rotation, damping, friction and inertia.

There are six groups of settings under drop-down folders. Here are the recommended settings for every folder.

SettingsValue 
Basic and mechanical feel settings
Overall StrengthMatch the maximum torque output of your wheelbase
Steering Range900
DampingBetween 3-5. Adds a slight resistance that helps prevent overcorrection
Friction0
Inertia0
Centering Force0
Smoothness settings
Reconstruction FilterBetween 2-4. Smooths out the FFB signal from the simulator. A higher value provides more smoothing
Slew Rate LimitUnlimited
Torque Bandwidth LimitUnlimited
Advanced filters
Static Force Reduction0
Ultra Low Latency20
Torque Linearity1
Bumpstop FeelSoft
Bumpstop Range900
Notch filter
Centre FrequencyOff. 
The notch filter is useful when you need to filter out a specific frequency from the FFB without smoothing the entire signal (for example, filter vibrations from curbs while keeping vibrations from flat spots).
AttenuationInfinite
Q Factor0.1
Game effect settings
Damping100
Friction100
Spring100
Sine Wave100
Square Wave100
Sawtooth100
Triangle100

Additional Tips

Once you’ve dialled everything in, click Save and make sure the profile is set as active. Go on track and run a few laps.

The FFB settings for Simucube wheelbases outlined in this article provide a solid baseline to work from. However, force feedback is subjective, and you may need to make adjustments to match your personal preferences. 

If something feels off, return to editing and change the settings. In particular, force feedback strength, smoothing, damping, and torque sensitivity are the settings you need to adjust when the FFB does not feel quite right.

You can find and quickly load other settings in the Simucube Tuner. Go to “Paddock” and apply relevant filters. Popular and well-received profiles are Dan Suzuki (Dan_Suzuki), Daniel Morad (Moradness) and Daniel Isaksen (Daniel_Isaksen).

Every Advantage needed for LMU

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