Lessons From Building Simulators
Thinking about building your own golf simulator? It’s exciting, but also a bit overwhelming. We’ve been there. After installing plenty of sims — both at home and in dedicated spaces — we’ve learned a few truths about what makes the difference between a setup you love and one that leaves you frustrated.
Budget: Spend Where It Counts
The first mistake a lot of people make is blowing the budget in the wrong places. You don’t need the fanciest extras straight away — but you do need to get the basics right.
- A quality screen that gives you a clear picture and doesn’t bounce balls back at your shins.
- A reliable launch monitor — because without good data, the whole thing is pointless.
- A projector and PC that can keep up, so you’re not watching lag instead of ball flight.
Once those are sorted, you can add the nice-to-haves: flooring, surrounds, even multi-sport.
The Building Blocks of a Sim
Every simulator needs a few key parts, and we’ve learned the hard way what happens when you cut corners:
- Impact Screen – Don’t skimp here. We’ve tested everything from cheap fabric to military-grade material. The result? One Pro screen that we know works, and one Home screen for those who want something more affordable but still solid.
- Launch Monitor – We tend to use TruGolf, which is relatively lees known, because it’s accurate, consistent, and easy to live with. APOGEE for ceiling-mounted builds, LaunchBox for mats, MultiSport if you want to mix it up.
- Projector & PC – Short throw is your friend, and a computer that doesn’t cough every time you open software saves a lot of swearing.
- Flooring & Mats – Good mats matter more than you think. Cheap ones feel awful on the joints. We’ve learned this the expensive way.
- Side Panels – Not just for stray shots — they tidy everything up and make the sim look like it belongs.
Value for Money: What Experience Teaches You
Here’s the thing: you can buy “budget” components all day long, but nine times out of ten, you’ll end up replacing them. Screens that stretch, mats that wear out, tech that doesn’t integrate — we’ve seen it all.
That’s why we keep it simple: one screen we trust, mats that last, tech we’ve tested. No fluff, no gimmicks. Just the stuff we know will work, because we’ve been through the trial and error already.
From Concept to Play
Building a simulator isn’t about chasing every shiny gadget — it’s about pulling the right pieces together so they work as one. Do that, and you’ll end up with a space you actually use (and brag about).
Our job? To help you get there without the expensive mistakes. We’ve already made them, so you don’t have to.
Hi, this is a comment.
To get started with moderating, editing, and deleting comments, please visit the Comments screen in the dashboard.
Commenter avatars come from Gravatar.