Troubleshooting

Sim Racing Pedal Drift: Why Your Wheel Moves When You Stop

Your car keeps going straight when you release the throttle — or your wheel self-centers even when you're holding it still. Here's what's actually causing pedal drift and how to fix it.

By Driver Labs | | 8 min read

Sim racing pedals close up
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What Is "Pedal Drift" in Sim Racing?

Pedal drift (sometimes called "throttle creep" or "pedal creep") happens when your car continues to accelerate after you've lifted off the throttle, or when your brake pressure reads as non-zero even with your foot completely off the pedal. It can also describe wheel self-centering when you expect the steering to stay locked in a specific position.

This is a genuine gameplay-affecting issue — it can make a car undrivable in sims like iRacing where small inputs matter enormously. It's one of the most-asked questions on r/simracing and yet almost no website has given a complete, definitive answer. Until now.

The 6 Main Causes of Pedal Drift

Cause #1: Throttle Creep — Spring Return Too Weak

Most budget pedals (potentiometer-based, not load cell) use a simple spring to return the throttle to zero. Over time, these springs weaken, compress, or become uneven. When you lift your foot, the pedal doesn't fully return to 0% — it stops at 3-5% input, which translates to gradual acceleration.

Fix: Check your pedal's software (Moza Pit House, Fanatec Control Panel, Thrustmaster TMP) and calibrate the throttle range manually. If the spring is worn, replacement springs are cheap. For long-term: upgrade to load cell pedals where the return mechanism is more consistent. See our best load cell pedals guide.

Cause #2: Pedal Travel Recalibration Gone Wrong

Many sim racers run the "auto-calibrate" function on their pedals and then the game also runs its own calibration. When these two don't agree, you get an offset — 0% physical doesn't equal 0% in-game. This is extremely common after updating firmware or switching USB ports.

Fix: Unplug the USB. Hold the pedal at 100% (fully pressed) while plugging back in. Release. This forces a clean recalibration. Then go into your game's pedal settings and confirm the min/max values match what you're physically seeing. Do NOT run both auto-calibration and in-game calibration at the same time.

Cause #3: Rubber Band / Elastomer Decay (Budget Pedals)

Elastomer pedals (like the Moza R3 bundle pedals, or Thrustmaster T-LCM) use rubber-like pads to provide resistance. Over months of use, these compress permanently and lose their return force. The result: throttle stays partially pressed after you lift your foot.

Fix: Replace the elastomer pads — they cost $10-30 depending on the brand. Some users drill small holes in the pads to reduce compression over time (mod at your own risk). Better long-term solution: upgrade to proper load cell pedals. The Simagic P500s or Fanatec CSL Load Cell have far more consistent return mechanisms.

Cause #4: Brake Pedal Not Returning to Zero (Load Cell)

Load cell brake pedals are designed to have a stiff, fixed resistance — they don't always "return" to zero the way throttle does. If your brake pedal stays pressed even slightly after you lift your foot, the car will brake on its own. Many load cell pedals have an adjustment screw for brake travel/return — if this is set wrong, you get drift.

Fix: Locate the return spring or rubber damper on your load cell brake pedal. Adjust the travel limiter screw so the pedal returns fully but still feels stiff at the bite point. In Moza Pit House or Simagic firmware, check that the brake pedal's minimum value is reading 0% when fully released. Some racers use a rubber band around the pedal arm to add return force.

Cause #5: Wheel Self-Centering When Holding Steady

If you're holding the wheel at a fixed angle but it keeps wanting to center itself, that's not pedal drift — that's an FFB (Force Feedback) issue. The wheel base is trying to return to center because the FFB signal is telling it to. This can happen if the game is set to "auto-center" in its FFB settings, or if your FFB strength is set too low for the forces the game is trying to communicate.

Fix: In your game's settings, turn OFF "Auto Center" or "Spring" effects when you're in a race car. Increase FFB overall strength. If your wheel self-centers during braking even with correct settings, check our FFB Clipping guide — you might be experiencing signal limiting.

Cause #6: USB Latency / Polling Rate Issues

This one is less common but real: if your USB connection is unstable or the pedal's polling rate (typically 250Hz or 1000Hz) is being interrupted by other USB devices on the same bus, you can get intermittent "stuck" values that don't update to zero quickly enough.

Fix: Connect pedals directly to a USB 2.0 or 3.0 port on the PC (not a hub). Avoid sharing the USB bus with high-bandwidth devices like webcams or external hard drives. Update your wheel base and pedal firmware. For best results, use a dedicated USB 2.0 port.

How to Prevent Pedal Drift

Most pedal drift is preventable with basic maintenance:

The Bottom Line

Pedal drift is almost always one of three things: a mechanical return issue (spring/elastomer worn), a calibration mismatch (game vs. pedal firmware), or a settings problem (FFB auto-center still active). Work through the checklist above and you'll find and fix the cause. If your pedals are genuinely worn out, it might be time to consider an upgrade — the best load cell pedal options under $300 are genuinely excellent and will eliminate most of these issues permanently.