Someone just asked me about OEM MK60E1 vs Motorsports flashed MK60E1 and if I had any experience with it. I actually did some back to back testing with them back in June, but just realized I posted the results on Facebook groups and that isn't really easily found through Google, so I'll add my review here for people to find -
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Warning - long post but worth the read if you're interested in possibly ponying up for the Motorsports flashed MK60s. TLDR at the bottom.
I got the unique experience on Friday to test an OEM MK60E1 and a Motorsports MK60E1 back to back. Same driver, same car, same tires, same day. Thanks Louis Gigliotti and Paul Costas for getting me on track on a member day, codriving to back up findings, as well as for letting me use your shop space to swap modules in the air conditioning (I need A/C in my garage now, so thanks for that ...).
As far as I know, I don't think anyone has done any back to back testing like this in the past, so we didn't know exactly what to expect, but we had our own predictions that turned out to be close, but not entirely right.
Before anyone asks, the Motorsports module was programmed for a car nearly identical to mine. Same chassis, same brakes, and total weights are within 100lbs of each other, so the module was essentially programmed for "my car".
Testing methodology was to go out on track and try and abuse the ABS to see how it would react, note any strange reactions, and then swap modules and repeat the tests in the following session (30 minutes between sessions)
So for the tests, we started out the morning on some old Hankook RS4 street tires. These gave a good baseline lower grip results, and also allowed us to test for "ice mode", since my ST47 pads can easily lock the tires with very little effort. Driving the two back to back sessions, the braking characteristics were indistinguishable. I could get he car sideways and hit the brakes and both modules would gather the car back up, I could brake on the rumble strips and the ABS just straight up worked, and the straight line braking deceleration rates felt nearly identical (data backs that up with ~1.2Gs of decel for both). If you "slap" the brake pedal and lock the tires up too quickly, you could get a hard pedal and braking power would be reduced slightly (not nearly as bad as traditional GM ice mode where theres no chance you're going to stop though). Decel differences between ice mode and non-ice mode according to the data was about 1.2G vs 1G (remember these are 3 year old endurance street tires, so we weren't expecting crazy decel numbers).
So we came back in and decided to swap tires to some Hoosier A7s to test the other end of the grip spectrum, as well as decided to have Paul codrive with me to get someone else's to opinion and maybe test any scenarios that I was missing.
We went out first with the Motorsport module and Paul came back impressed with the performance of the ABS. Again, the ABS just took whatever we threw at it.
We swapped back to the OEM module and went out for one last session. Paul drove the first half of the session, and then we swapped in hot pits. As we were swapping I tried to ask what his thoughts were but he was avoiding the question and said we'll talk about it after my laps. I did my laps, the ABS felt amazing once again. No ice mode/hard pedal problems with the correct brake pad/tire combo. Again, I couldn't distinguish any differences. In the back of my mind I knew Paul had found something so I tried make something happen to no avail. Looking at the data, straight line braking decel jumped up to 1.6Gs with the Hoosiers, which is about what I was hoping for.
So Paul and I sat down after the session and we talked through the difference he found. Basically, he found that if he got deep into a corner, trail braking in, and then just suddenly give it too much brake and lock the tires up, the Motorsport module would gather the car up, and tuck the nose in, like you would expect for normal trail braking. The OEM module on the other hand would introduce a slight (read very slight) push (understeer) into the car in the same scenario, seemingly because the tires would lock up and release too slowly. We're not sure what the exact difference that causes the module to behave differently, but Paul was able to reproduce this same thing multiple times during his sessions. Louis described this finding as "the difference between setting 1 and 2 on a Bosch Motorsports M5 ABS, while you still have 10 other settings to play with". After a whole day of abuse, this was the only difference we could find
TL;DR - So is the Motorsport flash worth it? For some people, yes it will be. You'll be able to reliably use the ABS in trail braking and don't even need any skill. For an endurance car, like WRL, where you are guaranteed to see changing weather conditions, this would be a great addition (especially if you're competing for the front of the field). For a hack driver like me that is somewhat smooth and doesn't use the ABS for trail braking, the ABS modules performed exactly the same.