simracingwheels

Home / Compare / vs

Ascher Racing F64-SC V3 vs Precision Sim Engineering ES-Pro

Budget formula flagship vs boutique formula flagship

The verdict

The PSE ES-Pro takes the win on raw input density with 109 mappable functions, but the Ascher F64-SC V3 remains the safer choice for Simucube owners who value native wireless and proven reliability.

Two boutique formula flagships built from billet aluminium with a focus on maximum input count. The Ascher F64-SC V3 at $1299 offers 64 inputs, native Simucube wireless, and the community trust of being the default Simucube wheel. The PSE ES-Pro at $1130 undercuts it by $169 whilst offering 109 inputs, SimHub RGB integration, and USB-C passthrough. The PSE is more capable on paper; the Ascher is more proven in practice.

Ascher Racing F64-SC V3 wins on

  • Native Simucube wireless with years of proven, dropout-free reliability.
  • CNC aluminium construction with zero flex, trusted by pro-sim racers.
  • Simucube button cell battery lasts 2-3 years with no charging required.

Precision Sim Engineering ES-Pro wins on

  • 109 mappable inputs versus 64, eliminating any need for multi-function buttons.
  • SimHub-controlled RGB turns the wheel into a live telemetry display.
  • Costs $169 less whilst offering UK-based engineering and support.

Ascher Racing F64-SC V3

$1299.00Out of Stock

Prices via affiliate API. We earn a commission on qualifying purchases.

Diameter 285 mm
Buttons 14
Rotary encoders 2
Thumb encoders 2
Paddles magnetic, CNC aluminium
Chassis Aluminium
Ascher Racing F64-SC V3 - Consensus Score Consensus radar chart for Ascher Racing F64-SC V3 synthesised from 3 reviews. Grip & Feel: 4.0 out of 5. Build Quality: 4.5 out of 5. Buttons & Paddles: 4.0 out of 5. Display & LEDs: 3.5 out of 5. Compatibility: 3.0 out of 5. Value: 2.5 out of 5. Aesthetics: 4.0 out of 5. 4.0 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 4.0 Grip & Feel Build Quality Buttons & Paddles Display & LEDs Compatibility Value Aesthetics Ascher Racing F64-SC V3 - Consensus Score Synthesised from 3 reviews · simracingwheels.com
What do these axes mean?

Each wheel is scored 1-5 on seven axes. The composite is weighted: feel, value and controls count for more than the rest. A 0 means insufficient evidence and collapses that spoke toward the centre.

Grip & Feel ×1.5
How the rim feels in your hands under load. Grip material, ergonomics, weight balance and comfort over long stints.
Build Quality ×1.0
Chassis rigidity, button and paddle feel, QR fitment, flex under braking. How solid the hardware is.
Buttons & Paddles ×1.2
Number and quality of inputs: buttons, rotaries, funky switches, thumb encoders, paddle shifters and clutch paddles.
Display & LEDs ×0.8
Screen type, resolution, brightness, rev lights, RGB indicators and SimHub support.
Compatibility ×1.0
QR ecosystem support, base compatibility range, platform support (PC, PlayStation, Xbox).
Value ×1.3
What you get for the money compared to direct rivals at the same price point and wheel type.
Aesthetics ×0.7
Visual design, finish quality, colour options. How the wheel looks mounted on the rig.
Ascher Racing F64-SC V3 - consensus rubric scores out of 5
AxisScore
Grip & Feel 4.0
Build Quality 4.5
Buttons & Paddles 4.0
Display & LEDs 3.5
Compatibility 3.0
Value 2.5
Aesthetics 4.0
Full Ascher Racing F64-SC V3 review →

Precision Sim Engineering ES-Pro

$1129.99Out of Stock

Prices via affiliate API. We earn a commission on qualifying purchases.

Diameter 285 mm
Weight 1400 g
Grip anti-dust silicone (50A Shore)
Precision Sim Engineering ES-Pro - Consensus Score Consensus radar chart for Precision Sim Engineering ES-Pro synthesised from 2 reviews. Grip & Feel: 4.0 out of 5. Build Quality: 4.5 out of 5. Buttons & Paddles: 3.5 out of 5. Display & LEDs: 3.5 out of 5. Compatibility: 3.0 out of 5. Value: 2.5 out of 5. Aesthetics: 4.0 out of 5. 4.0 4.5 3.5 3.5 3.0 2.5 4.0 Grip & Feel Build Quality Buttons & Paddles Display & LEDs Compatibility Value Aesthetics Precision Sim Engineering ES-Pro - Consensus Score Synthesised from 2 reviews · simracingwheels.com
What do these axes mean?

Each wheel is scored 1-5 on seven axes. The composite is weighted: feel, value and controls count for more than the rest. A 0 means insufficient evidence and collapses that spoke toward the centre.

Grip & Feel ×1.5
How the rim feels in your hands under load. Grip material, ergonomics, weight balance and comfort over long stints.
Build Quality ×1.0
Chassis rigidity, button and paddle feel, QR fitment, flex under braking. How solid the hardware is.
Buttons & Paddles ×1.2
Number and quality of inputs: buttons, rotaries, funky switches, thumb encoders, paddle shifters and clutch paddles.
Display & LEDs ×0.8
Screen type, resolution, brightness, rev lights, RGB indicators and SimHub support.
Compatibility ×1.0
QR ecosystem support, base compatibility range, platform support (PC, PlayStation, Xbox).
Value ×1.3
What you get for the money compared to direct rivals at the same price point and wheel type.
Aesthetics ×0.7
Visual design, finish quality, colour options. How the wheel looks mounted on the rig.
Precision Sim Engineering ES-Pro - consensus rubric scores out of 5
AxisScore
Grip & Feel 4.0
Build Quality 4.5
Buttons & Paddles 3.5
Display & LEDs 3.5
Compatibility 3.0
Value 2.5
Aesthetics 4.0
Full Precision Sim Engineering ES-Pro review →