Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

M-Track Mode

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Obioban
    replied
    This is, IMO, one of the best mods for our cars (and free). I used to be DSC off most of the time when doing any sort of enthusiastic driving. MTM is unobtrusive enough that I leave it on unless I'm drifting or doing burnouts.

    Leave a comment:


  • terra
    replied
    Originally posted by Cubieman View Post
    What is the date range of M3s equipped with MK60s?
    Model year 2003 (September 2002 build) and newer.

    Leave a comment:


  • sina
    replied
    Originally posted by Cubieman View Post
    What is the date range of M3s equipped with MK60s?
    It starts around model year 2003, and extends through the end. Someone correct me if I'm wrong but I believe there is no exact month, ie. some early 03's may have it and others not.

    Originally posted by bmwm3s50 View Post

    Is there anything to tell the difference if your in M-track mode or full DSC off i.e. light on the dash showing the difference of M-track and full DSC off?
    There is a light in the cluster - in some cars its disabled and it can be enabled, in others it has to be retrofit. That arrow/cricle on the left. You can do the cluster test to see if you have it. And I believe if you do the cluster test and you do have the light that also means you have the MK60.

    Click image for larger version

Name:	maxresdefault.jpg
Views:	1953
Size:	74.8 KB
ID:	3147

    Leave a comment:


  • bmwm3s50
    replied
    Originally posted by sina View Post

    I believe it becomes single press = m track mode, long press = DSC off.
    Is there anything to tell the difference if your in M-track mode or full DSC off i.e. light on the dash showing the difference of M-track and full DSC off?

    Leave a comment:


  • Cubieman
    replied
    What is the date range of M3s equipped with MK60s?

    Leave a comment:


  • T.J.
    replied
    Originally posted by sina View Post

    I believe it becomes single press = m track mode, long press = DSC off.
    This is the problem with the retrofit... long press to turn everything off. At least in a zcp you have separate buttons for M track mode and DSC off so you can always quickly defeat all the nannies

    Leave a comment:


  • bimmer
    replied
    Originally posted by sina View Post

    I believe it becomes single press = m track mode, long press = DSC off.
    Yes this is how it works.

    Leave a comment:


  • sina
    replied
    Originally posted by bmwm3s50 View Post
    If you activate the M track mode on DSC, can you fully defeat DSC and have it completely off? I remember reading you only have the option of M track or full DSC, with no ability to fully deactivate DSC.
    I believe it becomes single press = m track mode, long press = DSC off.

    Leave a comment:


  • bmwm3s50
    replied
    If you activate the M track mode on DSC, can you fully defeat DSC and have it completely off? I remember reading you only have the option of M track or full DSC, with no ability to fully deactivate DSC.

    Leave a comment:


  • Speed Monkey
    commented on 's reply
    I want to keep the peace here =P.... I was NOT at all trying to judge others, or put someone else’s liking down, and definitely trying not to condemn.

    There are as many ways to drive quickly as Baskin Robins (Ben & Jerry’s?) has flavored ice cream. All those personal preference styles on driving are all on the money.

    I’m a bit (maybe a lot - lol) of an “afraidy cat” of things like high speed sweepers and such. Give me an autoX where if I spin, I laugh at my inadequacy, slot it back into gear, and drive off to live another day. That’s all I’m sayin’, ya know...

  • jareds941
    replied
    Originally posted by Speed Monkey View Post
    I can understand the sentiment for more tail out action. It looks cool when Chris Harris Is lighting up a set of rear tires, and when he does, he barks and makes whooping sounds so it must be fun. The same goes for Tiff Needell. I like the feeling of driving close to the limit; I find it exciting to drive just under the limits of stock traction control. Seeing a brief flicker very sparingly, is my signal I’m doing it right, at least my own understanding of “right.” I guess I subscribe to: slow is smooth, smooth is fast; in like a lamb, out like a lion, etc.
    I think the difference, at least with regards to track driving, is something like trail braking to help the car rotate is 100% what you want to do on the track, but is generally speaking an input that a stability control system reads as something it should correct for. It's not, in my eyes, about tail out craziness, it's about being able to get the car to do what you want it do, without intervention. With that said, I'm new to the platform so I have no first hand experience with this computer and whether my example above is reality for this car

    Leave a comment:


  • Surge709
    replied
    Originally posted by jareds941 View Post

    Got it, thank you. Any downsides or things to be aware of as a result of this (other than the obvious intended result)?
    It creates a smaller margin for error so more change that DSC doesn't actually save you from a spin; but that's just physics. If it lets you have more freedom to slide, it reduces how much room it has to intervene. That said, I find this to be a fantastic safety net for track or back road use. On the highway, for instance, I always have full DSC on just in case.

    Leave a comment:


  • bimmer
    replied
    I did this over the summer and love what it's done to drivability. I put it in track mode pretty much any time I go for a drive - I wish I could set it as the default. The stock DSC kicks in way too early IMO. As I'm just getting into track days I find it's a great way to explore the limits before switching DSC off completely.

    Leave a comment:


  • HassanEido
    replied
    Brian sharing the good stuff as always !

    Leave a comment:


  • Speed Monkey
    replied
    I can understand the sentiment for more tail out action. It looks cool when Chris Harris Is lighting up a set of rear tires, and when he does, he barks and makes whooping sounds so it must be fun. The same goes for Tiff Needell. I like the feeling of driving close to the limit; I find it exciting to drive just under the limits of stock traction control. Seeing a brief flicker very sparingly, is my signal I’m doing it right, at least my own understanding of “right.” I guess I subscribe to: slow is smooth, smooth is fast; in like a lamb, out like a lion, etc.

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X