I have 4 Warthog HOTAS systems, one stretching back to the first run when it was first offered. I also have the Cougar / TQS from before the Warthog. I use the original Warthog and Cougar to this day and when I noticed a growing clunk in the Cougar base around center (worn bearing from years of use) I decided to upgrade the base to this Magnetic one, and still use the Cougar stick...Worked perfectly, once attached, right outta the box.First, this magnetic base feels a LOT different than the original Warthog. Its much smoother and it glides in and out of axis-center (independently) without a significant center feel. It does snap to center nicely. More specifically though, there is no discernable difference in pulling force between the roll and pitch axis, when moving, say, to 050 DEG or 180 DEG or 290 DEG. The same pull is required so your arm / wrist itself must determine where to put the stick. You don't get a "tug" or holding force along the roll axis to stay centered, as you pull back on pitch. Some might not like that, but I find it realistic, based on my own IRL military pilot experience in multiple tactical aircraft. What I do notice though, is that without that distinctive off intended axis tug from the original base, you can wander off to an off-axis input if your stick isn't centered with your arm. Just like IRL. In time I am certain I will have the muscle memory to prevent that, but for now, I do notice occasional off axis input by my own doing. Nonetheless, it tracks very precisely, as you would expect. No noticeable jitter yet (3 weeks of use). There is no rubber gasket as the stick base interface. Rather, the post transitions to a visible black "ball" joint that has a 1-3mm gap from the case, leading into the actual base itself. This might be an issue over time with particulate matter getting into the base. Keep the trail mix away from this stick The base is no bigger than the original, so if you can live with / need that size of base plate, you are set. I have mine setting nicely on the arm extensions I built for my home pit, and it works fine, weighty enough to be stable in most situations. But to cap it all, the second my son tried it, he stated, "Oh boy I'm getting one of these!"