TrackMan Simulator Installation in New Jersey
Tour-trusted radar tracking, installed and calibrated in a room that lets it perform. We confirm your space suits TrackMan before you commit to it.
Radar tracking with a tour pedigree
TrackMan built its reputation on driving ranges and tour practice grounds: radar-based tracking that follows the ball and club through space, producing the data set (club path, face angle, spin loft, carry) that many teaching professionals treat as the reference standard. Indoor TrackMan systems bring that same data language into a simulator bay, which is a real advantage if you take lessons from a TrackMan-equipped coach: your indoor numbers and your lesson numbers speak the same dialect.
The trade-off is spatial. Radar systems generally want generous room depth to see ball flight develop, and TrackMan sits at the premium end of the market. In a room with honest depth, it's superb. In a compressed room, a camera-based system can be the smarter buy, and we'll say so.

Our position: we install TrackMan, Foresight, and Golfzon systems and don't earn more by steering you to any of them. The right choice depends on room size, budget, accuracy needs, gameplay preferences, camera versus radar requirements, and installation type. Start with your room; it usually narrows the field before budget does.
What a TrackMan bay wants from your room
Depth first
Radar rewards depth. Figure comfortably over 20 ft of total room depth for indoor setups, verified against the specific unit during design.
Placement discipline
Radar placement behind the hitting zone (or overhead, for units designed that way) is precise work; inches change data quality.
Ceiling & swing clearance
The usual roughly 9–10 ft guidance applies. The swing, not the radar, sets the height floor.
Both-handed play
Lefty/righty households need width and a layout that keeps the unit reading both sides. Solvable, but it has to be planned, not improvised.
TrackMan tends to reward…
- Golfers who practice with data and take lessons seriously
- Rooms with generous depth, where basements and new construction shine
- Buyers planning a premium, long-term bay
- Coaches and clubs standardizing on tour-grade numbers
Tighter on depth? Foresight's camera-based units measure at the ball and tolerate compressed rooms well. Prioritizing course play and entertainment over raw data? Golfzon builds its platform around the playing experience. We'll lay the options against your actual room during the survey.
Frequently asked questions
How much room depth does a TrackMan simulator need?
Plan on more than 20 ft of total room depth for most indoor TrackMan configurations, because the radar needs to see ball flight develop. Exact requirements vary by unit and layout, which is precisely what we verify in your room before you purchase.
Is TrackMan worth it for a home simulator?
If you practice with data, work with a TrackMan-equipped coach, or want tour-standard numbers, it can absolutely justify its premium. If your priority is casual course play in a tight basement, other systems may deliver more enjoyment per dollar. We'll tell you which side of that line your project sits on.
Can TrackMan work in a basement?
Yes, when the basement has the depth and the layout keeps the radar's view clean. Deep, open NJ basements handle it well; chopped-up or shallow rooms often don't. A site survey settles it definitively.
Do you install TrackMan for both left and right-handed golfers?
Yes. Both-handed play affects unit placement and room width, so we design for it explicitly from the first measurement rather than adjusting after installation.
Are you an authorized TrackMan dealer?
We install and calibrate TrackMan systems as an independent integrator, and we help clients source units correctly. We don't claim dealer or partnership status we don't hold, and you'll always get straight answers about how equipment is sourced for your project.
Ready to plan your simulator room?
Tell us about your space and goals. We’ll confirm fit, walk you through equipment options, and put together a clear quote. No pressure, no jargon.
