30 September 2011 12:58 GMT / By Stuart Miles
Just how serious are you about racing games? Serious enough to spend £129 on the new Thrustmaster Ferrari F1 Wheel add-on for the £379.99 Thrustmaster T500 RS Force Wheel? Great, then read on.
The new accessory for the ultimate gaming racer snaps on to the already pretty hardcore T500 RS rig and works with PC games or the PS3 console from Sony.
The removable racing wheel is a life-size replica of the Ferrari 150 Italia racing wheel, complete with a bevy of buttons and dials.
The Ferrari F1 Wheel Add-On features a scratch-brushed reinforced metal facing and scratch-brushed metal F1 Push and Pull sequential shifters that are directly attached to the wheel in true F1 tradition and feature rubber-textured grips.
If that wasn’t enough to make you feel like you are driving a Ferrari, the rotary knobs, switches and action buttons probably will.
The racing wheel offers two rotary encoder switches (allowing direct, on-the-track optimisation of the car's race settings), eight push-buttons (with a 6.5 N dual-detent pressure), three 4.5 N metal switches with 3 positions and an automatic centring feature, two 2.5 N 8-directional D-Pads and two up/down shifters.
When it comes to system compatibility, two game modes are available: a PC & PS3-compatible normal mode (offering 13 action buttons and 3 D-Pads, i.e. 17 programmable functions) and an advanced PC-compatible mode (offering 25 action buttons and 1 D-Pad, i.e. 29 programmable functions).
The T500 RS is already available, while the Thrustmaster Ferrari F1 add-on wheel will be available from 14 October, giving you enough time to enjoy the last couple of races as if you were actually racing them yourself.
It even has DRS.
Gaming, Thrustmaster, Ferrari, PS3, PC accessories, Gaming accessories, Controllers





Sony PlayStation Vita Curriculum Vita
FIFA 12: UEFA Euro 2012 Lacks polish, if not the Polish
Pokemon Yellow on iPhone is massive scam... how did it get Apple approval? Unofficial and broken
First Look: PlayStation Vita Got to hand it to Sony
Pocket-lint Gadget Awards 2011 winners Who won what?
Is Facebook about to buy Opera to create own Facebook browser? EXCLUSIVE: Pocket-lint source tells us "yes"
APP OF THE DAY: The Weather Channel review (iPhone / iPod touch) Tonight for the first time, just about half-past ten...
Mazda CX5 2.2 TDI AWD A very zoomy SUV
Which smartphone is best for the sun? Screens for the Summer
Jony Ive: Next Apple product is our most important and best work yet Better than iPod, iPad and iPhone?
Batman Nokia Lumia 900: Limited edition phone heading to UK Who are you? I'm Batman
Dragon's Dogma Adventure time
Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon: Future Soldier Roger likes a Tango at 12 o'clock
Porsche 911 Carrera (991) 2012 pictures and hands-on WANT
Canon EOS 5D MK III It's a hat-trick
Robert Moog Google doodle best yet, even better than Les Paul Synthesizer synthesiser
British Gas turns Team GB swimming stars into superheroes Aquanauts assemble
APP OF THE DAY: Mini Motor review (Android, iPhone and iPad) Top-down. Top app.
Microsoft Office coming to iPad and Android tablets this November A change of heart?
Toshiba AT300: The quad-core 10.1-inch ICS Android tablet UPDATE: Pricing unveiled
Olympus OM-D E-M5 review
The compact system camera to beat all others?
Nokia Lumia 900 review
Is big beautiful?
HTC One V review
V for victory?
Huawei Ascend G300 review
Big bang for your hundred quid
FIFA 12: UEFA Euro 2012 review
Lacks polish, if not the Polish
Asus Transformer Pad TF300T review
Transforms your money in to a great tablet
Nikon Coolpix P510 review
Does the P510 zoom beyond expectations?
Fujifilm X-Pro1 review
Like a Leica
Volkswagen Beetle Design 1.2TSi DSG review
The bug is back. Again.
BlackBerry Curve 9320 review
A BB for beginners?
Fujifilm FinePix HS30EXR review
Can Fujifilm’s latest put the ‘super’ in superzoom?
HP Envy 14 Spectre review
The Ultrabook that isn't an Ultrabook
The Walking Dead: The Game review
Fleshed out zombie bonanza
Nikon Coolpix S6300 review
Point, shoot and scoot