Is the QS-CH2 Right For You?
Not every product is right for every buyer. Here's an honest breakdown to help you decide if this is the right choice for your setup, budget, and goals.
Best For
- Sim racers wanting real traction loss and surge rather than tilt-based approximation
- Drivers running GT3, F1, touring car or open-wheel titles where rear-axle feedback dominates
- Buyers wanting a 2DOF platform that's expandable to 5DOF later via QS-210 or QS-220 actuator sets
- Users prioritising industrial-grade actuators and physical motion realism over visual or vibration-based approximation
Consider the QS-V20 Instead If
- Your budget can stretch to £19,990+
- You want pitch, roll and heave in addition to surge and yaw
- Full 4DOF motion in a single integrated platform matters more than the modularity of CH2 + actuator set
Not Recommended For
- Flight simmers - traction loss and surge aren't flight-relevant in the same way; consider QS-V20 or QS-S25 for flight-applicable Qubic options
- Buyers under £8,000 - the CH2 sits above amateur platforms and shouldn't be the first motion purchase
- Anyone wanting pitch and roll specifically - the CH2 does surge and yaw, not those axes