Traction Control:
This is the bit that I felt was most similar between the two modules. Traction control seems to come on at about the same threshold and allows about the same amount of spin. The one difference is that the MK60 intervention seems a bit more gradual. On the MK20, you can feel the entirely drivetrain clunking and jerking around whenever power is cut. This feeling is still there with the MK60, but it's less aggressive. Hard gear shifts with cold tires still result in the same level of annoyance when you forget to turn DSC off, though.
Stability Control:
I'll start with my impressions about the system fully on. It seems like the slip threshold is pretty similar to the MK20. Doesn't really allow you to get sideways at all, but is much more subtle about it. The pulsing felt through the pedal is of lesser magnitude and the system seems to intervene at a higher frequency but less aggressively. All of this yields to less upsetting of the car in a turn. Biggest difference is probably that it feels like the system is intervening less, when in reality it's doing about the same. This is great because it lets you focus more on your driving inputs vs trying to work around the stability control. That being said, the system will still be just as jerky if you truly try to get the car sideways (say, when you take a sharp turn from a stop and break traction), but that's to be expected.
When M track mode is enabled, the slip threshold increases, but not as much as I thought. It seems like it works mostly on wheel speed delta between the front and rear axle. It won't let you get the car super sideways at lower speed, but it will allow slip in corners at higher speeds. I've found that the biggest difference isn't so much in the amount of oversteer it allows, but instead in the amount of understeer. With the MK20, pretty much any steering input with the front end loaded up resulted in the system activating. The MK60 with everything on is much less aggressive at this, but still intervenes a bit (especially at the track). M track mode makes it so that you reaally have to be pushing the front end a lot before it starts intervening.
I've booked an autox in two weeks, so I'll get a chance to test M track mode a bit more there, but that's been my experience so far with it. I will say that I didn't find it super useful on track. It would start getting in the way as soon as the tires warmed up. However, it was nice for catching mistakes in the first couple laps when I thought the tires had warmed up and they hadn't.
ABS:
This is where I felt the biggest difference (and it was especially huge on track). I do have to give a disclaimer and say that I wasn't the best of scientists, though. I changed three variables at once (MK60, tires, track), so it wasn't truly a fair comparison. Regardless, I felt the difference was big enough that it was worth writing about.
I will probably book a track day at the track I'm most familiar with (Thunderhill East) and take the wheels + tires I was using before (PS4Ss) to run a couple sessions with. This should yield the most direct comparison, but for now, my bad science will have to do.
I can't speak to stopping distances, but I can say that hard ABS braking feels MUCH more controlled with the MK60. When the MK20 was on and I got hard into ABS braking, the entire car would get unsettled and I would have to actively counter steer to keep it going straight. With the MK60, this is no longer the case. I can stand on the brake as hard as I can and the car will come to a stop in a much more calm and controlled manner, no steering input required at all. The system even handles ABS braking with the steering wheel turned surprisingly well. Not that you ever really want to be doing that, but I was messing around with it on track and the car just slowed down as it turned, instead of squirming around all over the place.
Additionally —kinda like with the stability control the feedback in the pedal is significantly improved. MK60 makes the pedal shake at a lower amplitude and higher frequency than the MK20. It's a lot more confidence inspiring and gives the impression that just the unsprung bits are experiencing the effects of ABS and not the entire car. Feeling is much more refined, which makes it feel like you can tell what each tire is doing through the pedal. Probably just something I'm imagining, but it definitely feels like that.
In conclusion, I'm happy with the swap. The ABS improvements alone make it worth it to me. If anyone close to me has a similar weight MK20 car on PS4Ss, we could do some brake tests to see which one stops better. I have a feeling MK60 will win, but it would be nice to have concrete data

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