1. Why Pedals Determine Your Lap Time
In modern sim racing, pedals are the most critical component for consistency, rotation, and braking precision. The wheel helps you react — the pedals determine whether you hit the apex.
Force-based braking (load cell, hydraulic, active) delivers:
- More consistent braking points
- Better trail braking
- Fewer lock-ups
- More consistent lap times
This is why professional drivers always use force-based systems, not travel-based sensors.
2. Active, Hydraulic or Load Cell – What's the Difference?
Active Pedals
Motor-driven resistance with haptic feedback. The pedal simulates resistance, ABS pulse, vibrations, and pedal profile via software.
Examples (SimEdge):
- Simucube ActivePedal
- MOZA mBooster Active Pedal
Features:
- Can emulate everything from 1960s brake feel to modern F1 profile
- Fully software-defined force curve
- Zero mechanical maintenance
- Extreme precision and repeatability
Hydraulic Pedals
Fluid-based resistance circuit that replicates real GT and LMP cars.
Examples (SimEdge):
- Simagic P2000 Hydraulic
- Simagic P1000i-RS Inverted Pedal
- CONSPIT CPP-EVO 2
Features:
- Realistic brake bite point
- Progressive resistance curve
- Adjustable via springs, elastomers, and travel
- Configurable for both GT and Formula feel
Load Cell Pedals
Pressure sensor measuring force in kg. Best price-to-performance ratio with high consistency.
Examples (SimEdge):
- Simagic P1000 / P1000i
- CONSPIT CPP-Lite 2 / 3
- MOZA CRP2
Features:
- Consistent brake feel
- Adjustable travel and resistance
- Configurable for GT, Formula, Rally, and Drift
- Minimal maintenance
3. Muscle Memory: Force vs Travel
The brain remembers force, not position. Travel-based pedals vary depending on:
- Foot angle
- Seating position
- Mechanical play
Force-based systems eliminate variation from foot angle and seating position. The result is noticeably more consistent braking and higher repeatability compared to travel-based pedals.
4. Rigidity – The Hidden Enemy
Pedal deck flex destroys precision. Even minimal movement in the pedal plate affects brake pressure and creates inconsistent feedback — especially at high brake forces.
Recommendation: Always mount pedals on:
- 80/20 aluminum profile
- Zero flex in the pedal plate
This is critical for Active, Hydraulic, and Load Cell systems.
5. Choose the Right Feel – Not the Right Technology
All modern premium systems (Active, Hydraulic, Load Cell) can be configured for different car classes. That's why we describe the feel, not the technology.
Formula Feel
- Short travel (5–20 mm)
- High brake force (100–200 kg)
- Highly progressive curve
- Instant response
Best for: sprint races, open-wheel, telemetry-driven driving.
GT / Endurance Feel
- Medium travel (15–40 mm)
- 60–100 kg brake force
- Progressive with heavy modulation
- Stable trail braking
Best for: GT3, LMP, endurance racing.
Rally / Drift Feel
- Long throttle throw
- Defined clutch bite point
- More pedal movement
- Mechanical feel
Best for: rally, drifting, H-pattern.

Choose the Right System – Quick Guide
| Driver Profile | Recommended System | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Beginner / budget | Load Cell | Simagic P1000, MOZA CRP2 |
| GT / Endurance | Hydraulic | Simagic P2000, Simagic P1000i-RS Inverted Pedal |
| Maximum precision | Active Pedals | Simucube ActivePedal, MOZA mBooster |
| Rally / Drift | Load Cell or Hydraulic | CONSPIT CPP-Lite, CPP-EVO 2 |
6. FAQ – Sim Racing Pedals 2026
Which pedals are best for sim racing in 2026?
Active Pedals (Simucube, MOZA mBooster) deliver maximum precision and haptic feedback. Hydraulic pedals (Simagic P2000) offer the most realism. Load Cell (Simagic P1000, MOZA CRP2, Cube Controls SP01 Core Pedals) offer the best price-to-performance ratio. All three types can be configured for GT, Formula, and Rally.
How much do good sim racing pedals cost?
Load cell pedals start around 300–600 EUR. Hydraulic systems range from 600–1,500 EUR. Active Pedals cost 1,000–2,500 EUR depending on brand and configuration.
What's the difference between load cell and hydraulic?
Load cell measures force via a pressure sensor — simple, reliable, and maintenance-free. Hydraulic uses fluid to simulate real braking systems — more realistic feel but requires basic annual servicing.
What are Active Pedals?
Motorized pedals with digital resistance, ABS pulse simulation, and software profiles. The pedal can emulate everything from 1960s brake feel to a modern F1 profile via software.
Can I mix pedals and wheel base from different brands?
Yes. On PC, all pedals connect via USB independently of the wheel base brand — Simagic pedals work with a MOZA base and vice versa.
Do I need a stiff rig for premium pedals?
Yes. Pedals above 60–80 kg brake force require an aluminum profile (80/20) or steel chassis. Even minimal flex in the pedal plate noticeably affects brake pressure at high brake forces.
Can load cell and hydraulic pedals deliver a Formula feel?
Yes. Most premium systems have adjustable travel and resistance that can match both GT and Formula profiles.
Which pedals suit a beginner?
Load cell is the natural choice — high consistency, minimal setup, and long service life. Simagic P1000 and MOZA CRP2 are popular starting points.
7. The SimEdge Philosophy
SimEdge doesn't sell "gaming pedals". We sell engineering tools for drivers chasing tenths.
Our focus:
- Force linearity
- Mechanical rigidity
- Long-term precision
- Future-proof systems
SimEdge specialises in premium sim racing pedals — load cell, hydraulic, and active pedals — from leading brands including Simagic, Simucube, Cube Controls, MOZA, and CONSPIT.
Source: SimEdge.se – technical guide to sim racing pedals 2026. Continuously updated with new products and reviews.