What is SimLogix?
Overview of the SimLogix ecosystem: the R-Box (hardware) and the desktop app (software), built together for serious sim racers.
SimLogix is not a product, it is an ecosystem: a hardware box and a desktop app, designed together to push your sim racing data off the main screen.
Two products, one stream
The R-Box — hardware
The R-Box is a physical device inspired by the Racelogic VBOX Pit Lane Timer used in real motorsport. It sits in front of your wheel, out of your primary line of sight, and displays in real time:
- the delta to your best lap, signed, to the hundredth,
- the lap time in progress,
- the instant speed and the engaged gear.
USB-C connection, no driver to install. 3.12-inch OLED screen (256×64 pixels), three side buttons to switch modes, two green LEDs on the front. End-to-end latency under 100 ms.
The SimLogix app — software
The SimLogix app is a Windows desktop app that acts as the brain of your cockpit. It:
- reads your simulator (iRacing, Assetto Corsa),
- computes telemetry locally (delta, sectors, speed, gear),
- drives every sim racing peripheral you own: the R-Box of course, but also LCD dashboards, RPM LED bars, button boxes,
- handles per-game profiles, mappings, custom layouts.
Everything runs locally on your PC: no cloud, no account, no hidden latency.
Who it is for
SimLogix is built for sim racers who take their rig seriously: long endurance sessions, hunting reference laps, methodical run-by-run comparison. If you want a quick glance to follow your delta without taking your eyes off the line, the R-Box is for you. If you collect peripherals and want to unify them under one interface, the SimLogix app is for you.
How it differs from an overlay
Software overlays (SimHub, CrewChief, etc.) live inside your game screen. They consume pixels you are already looking at, and force you to briefly look away from the racing line to read a number.
SimLogix steps out of overlays: the data is on a separate physical device, placed exactly like a Pit Lane Timer in real motorsport. It is an aesthetic and ergonomic choice — the game screen stays dedicated to driving.
Current status
The project is in prototype phase. The Python engine already reads iRacing in real time; the desktop app and the R-Box are coming in the next few months. To follow the build and get notified at launch, join the waitlist.