You're missing a lot of what drag mode does for an A10. Removes a significant amount of torque management and increases shift pressure. There is no debate th car is quicker and faster in drag mode by a large margin on an A10 carDepends on what you mean. In some respects they do, in others they don't.
Sport+ mode opens the throttle more than you press the pedal, giving you the impression that the car is faster. But it's just a scam. You can simply press the pedal more in Normal mode and get the exact same effect (and even more predictably at that).
Rain/Snow mode is hideous. Avoid it at all costs. It feels like the car is broken. Absolutely horrible.
Track mode behaves just like Normal in some vehicles, or like Sport+ in others. I think it depends on the manufacturing year, but I'm not sure. In my 2020 GT it was programmed like Sport+ before I changed it. Apart from that, Track mode will make the traction control a bit more loose and will stiffen the suspension (if you have Magneride).
Drag mode softens the front suspension and stiffens the rear (or the other way around, I can't remember). Again, if you have Magneride. If you don't, it doesn't do anything.
They also make the exhaust a bit louder as you go from Normal to Sport+ to Track, if you have the active one. You don't, so scrap this.
That's it, in a nutshell. So, without Magneride and active exhaust they don't really do much except make the car seem faster in Sport+, or make it utterly undrivable in Rain/Snow. And in Track, tell the traction control to let you play a little before it steps in.
Keep it in Normal, use the throttle judiciously, and you're good.
Fair point. I was thinking of a manual gearbox. I missed that the OP had an A10.You're missing a lot of what drag mode does for an A10. Removes a significant amount of torque management and increases shift pressure. There is no debate th car is quicker and faster in drag mode by a large margin on an A10 car
You don't need to hold the brake. It's just a long hold on the traction control button. It does NOT turn it all the way off. The only way for that is the "dyno" plug under the hood.You can also turn off Advancetrak by holding the brake pedal and the drive mode switch together for a number of seconds, at least on my car.
My gut feeling is that this does not fully disable stability control, just neuters it though. Anyone know for sure? Do I need to pull a fuse to completely disable it?
Actually it does turn it all the way off, as long as you hold that button for the full 7 or so seconds. It can error and reboot (it dings a dash message), but that's rare.You can also turn off Advancetrak by holding the brake pedal and the drive mode switch together for a number of seconds, at least on my car.
My gut feeling is that this does not fully disable stability control, just neuters it though. Anyone know for sure? Do I need to pull a fuse to completely disable it?
I have spent a lot of time on closed courses with a helmet on with both pulling the dyno plug or just using the interior switch are exactly the same. No nibbling at brakes or cutting power with the switch. Its pretty obvious at a track day or autocross when its active, even a little bit.You don't need to hold the brake. It's just a long hold on the traction control button. It does NOT turn it all the way off. The only way for that is the "dyno" plug under the hood.
I does NOT turn is off all the way on mine at least(2022 A10)! I have tried several times to do donuts and the ONLY way it'll let me is by pulling the dyno plug. If I try to just turn it off with a long press, it'll spin out and throw about every light on the dash and shut off the car every time! It may be different with the '15-'17 or with the manual.Actually it does turn it all the way off, as long as you hold that button for the full 7 or so seconds. It can error and reboot (it dings a dash message), but that's rare.
I have spent a lot of time on closed courses with a helmet on with both pulling the dyno plug or just using the interior switch are exactly the same. No nibbling at brakes or cutting power with the switch. Its pretty obvious at a track day or autocross when its active, even a little bit.
I guess people think its active when they break traction with the rear tires and aren't going anywhere because they're just spinning wheels. That's a lack of traction, not traction control.
There's not a ton going on with the Mustang stability/traction control. its not like the GM e-diff in the camaro. The only tricks up the Ford's sleeve is to cut engine power or nibble at the brake on one corner to keep the car straight.
That is not what my owner's manual says:You don't need to hold the brake. It's just a long hold on the traction control button. It does NOT turn it all the way off. The only way for that is the "dyno" plug under the hood.
The electronic stability control portion of the system is disabled when the transmission is in reverse (R) or, on some models, if you press and hold the electronic stability control button for more than five seconds when you apply the brakes and the vehicle is at a stop.
I does NOT turn is off all the way on mine at least(2022 A10)! I have tried several times to do donuts and the ONLY way it'll let me is by pulling the dyno plug. If I try to just turn it off with a long press, it'll spin out and throw about every light on the dash and shut off the car every time! It may be different with the '15-'17 or with the manual.