DSC Sport V3 Control Module
Tom, quick advice requested. I have a 991.2 C4S Cab with V3 installed. After getting it, I installed some lighter than OEM forged HREs. The fronts were each 4lbs lighter and the rears were each 6lbs lighter than stock wheels. With the lighter wheels, the ride seemed much more compliant, but on occasion, a bit too soft. Having recently sold the HREs and gone back to OEM wheels, I notice the ride is much firmer. Is that just increased suspension responsiveness from the much lighter wheels? Is the DSC automatically compensating for the change in unsprung weight? I never added a Mini-USB capable when installing my DSC module but now rethinking that as maybe I need to play around with different maps. I’d kind of lime something in between what the car felt like with the HREs and OEM wheels, as I will be getting another set of HREs in the Spring.
I never noticed any suspension weirdness going between different weight wheels (Stock vs HRE).
https://rennlist.com/forums/991/1161...n-and-dsc.html
Last edited by AdamSanta85; Sep 18, 2020 at 12:50 PM.
You should to Zero out the ride height with a laptop when you install the unit to get best performance. I would try that first.
I never noticed any suspension weirdness going between different weight wheels (Stock vs HRE).
https://rennlist.com/forums/991/1161...n-and-dsc.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_c...ture=emb_title
I never noticed any suspension weirdness going between different weight wheels (Stock vs HRE).
https://rennlist.com/forums/991/1161...n-and-dsc.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_c...ture=emb_title
You should to Zero out the ride height with a laptop when you install the unit to get best performance. I would try that first.
I never noticed any suspension weirdness going between different weight wheels (Stock vs HRE).
https://rennlist.com/forums/991/1161...n-and-dsc.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_c...ture=emb_title
I never noticed any suspension weirdness going between different weight wheels (Stock vs HRE).
https://rennlist.com/forums/991/1161...n-and-dsc.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_c...ture=emb_title
The documentation is out of date.
Tom, quick advice requested. I have a 991.2 C4S Cab with V3 installed. After getting it, I installed some lighter than OEM forged HREs. The fronts were each 4lbs lighter and the rears were each 6lbs lighter than stock wheels. With the lighter wheels, the ride seemed much more compliant, but on occasion, a bit too soft.
Around town mapping is challenging partly because tire pressure doesn’t go up very much during slow driving. Once on the highway, the additional 4+ psi has noticeable effect on comfort. Depending on where in the “sweet spot” range you are, more psi can actually add stability and remove the bouncing you probably observed.
Tom, quick advice requested. I have a 991.2 C4S Cab with V3 installed. After getting it, I installed some lighter than OEM forged HREs. The fronts were each 4lbs lighter and the rears were each 6lbs lighter than stock wheels. With the lighter wheels, the ride seemed much more compliant, but on occasion, a bit too soft. Having recently sold the HREs and gone back to OEM wheels, I notice the ride is much firmer. Is that just increased suspension responsiveness from the much lighter wheels? Is the DSC automatically compensating for the change in unsprung weight? I never added a Mini-USB capable when installing my DSC module but now rethinking that as maybe I need to play around with different maps. I’d kind of lime something in between what the car felt like with the HREs and OEM wheels, as I will be getting another set of HREs in the Spring.
DSC adjust the damping force commands to the driver's input in real time. It will also adjust to the tire's grip in real time via g-force. But it does not adjust to the ride quality of changing tires/wheels, the user would have to do that if one particular tire/wheel combo feels 3% softer than another combo...
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2022 Porsche Sprint Challenge 992 Cup & 991 Cup Champion
2020 IMSA GT3 Cup Challenge 2nd Championship
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PCA National Instructor
TPC Racing stats:
2023 Porsche Sprint Challenge 992 Cup Am Champion
2023 Porsche Sprint Challenge GT4 Pro-Am Team Champion
2022 Porsche Sprint Challenge 992 Cup & 991 Cup Champion
2020 IMSA GT3 Cup Challenge 2nd Championship
2018 IMSA GT3 Cup Challenge 2nd Championship
2016 IMSA GT3 Cup Challenge Champion
2013 IMSA GT3 Cup Challenge Champion
2006 Rolex-24 @ Daytona GT Champion
2004 Grand-Am SGS Class Champion
Same exact tires swapped over to different rims, same air pressure on same size wheels, just heavier wheels vs lighter wheels.
My question has more to do with how the DSC Sport actually works. Isn’t it supposed to adjust damping rates dynamically vs the OEM’s “static” damping rate, no? If so, shouldn’t a lighter wheel create less momentum/force going over a bump, hence the suspension not needing to firm up the damping rate as much to accomplish the same thing? Shouldn’t that alone provide a more supple/compliant ride if the damping doesn’t need to act as aggressively to control the rebound of the heavier wheel going over a bump? All I can say is that going to the lighter forged HREs, saving 6lbs/rear wheel & 4lbs/front wheel, dramatically changed the ride on the car. I noticed it when the HREs were first put on, and then felt the opposite effect when the heavier cast OEM wheels were remounted. Again, same exact set of tires and same air pressure.
My question has more to do with how the DSC Sport actually works. Isn’t it supposed to adjust damping rates dynamically vs the OEM’s “static” damping rate, no? If so, shouldn’t a lighter wheel create less momentum/force going over a bump, hence the suspension not needing to firm up the damping rate as much to accomplish the same thing? Shouldn’t that alone provide a more supple/compliant ride if the damping doesn’t need to act as aggressively to control the rebound of the heavier wheel going over a bump? All I can say is that going to the lighter forged HREs, saving 6lbs/rear wheel & 4lbs/front wheel, dramatically changed the ride on the car. I noticed it when the HREs were first put on, and then felt the opposite effect when the heavier cast OEM wheels were remounted. Again, same exact set of tires and same air pressure.
Last edited by mc3456; Sep 18, 2020 at 05:01 PM.
Same exact tires swapped over to different rims, same air pressure on same size wheels, just heavier wheels vs lighter wheels.
My question has more to do with how the DSC Sport actually works. Isn’t it supposed to adjust damping rates dynamically vs the OEM’s “static” damping rate, no? If so, shouldn’t a lighter wheel create less momentum/force going over a bump, hence the suspension not needing to firm up the damping rate as much to accomplish the same thing? Shouldn’t that alone provide a more supple/compliant ride if the damping doesn’t need to act as aggressively to control the rebound of the heavier wheel going over a bump? All I can say is that going to the lighter forged HREs, saving 6lbs/rear wheel & 4lbs/front wheel, dramatically changed the ride on the car. I noticed it when the HREs were first put on, and then felt the opposite effect when the heavier cast OEM wheels were remounted. Again, same exact set of tires and same air pressure.
My question has more to do with how the DSC Sport actually works. Isn’t it supposed to adjust damping rates dynamically vs the OEM’s “static” damping rate, no? If so, shouldn’t a lighter wheel create less momentum/force going over a bump, hence the suspension not needing to firm up the damping rate as much to accomplish the same thing? Shouldn’t that alone provide a more supple/compliant ride if the damping doesn’t need to act as aggressively to control the rebound of the heavier wheel going over a bump? All I can say is that going to the lighter forged HREs, saving 6lbs/rear wheel & 4lbs/front wheel, dramatically changed the ride on the car. I noticed it when the HREs were first put on, and then felt the opposite effect when the heavier cast OEM wheels were remounted. Again, same exact set of tires and same air pressure.
DSC adjusts to g-force changes and to other inputs on the car's computer network. It does not adjust to the weight of the wheels, unless the weight of wheels causes a detectable change in the travel velocity of the suspension, which they likely do not.
Sorry I have no explanation for you as to why the same set of tires on different wheels changes the ride quality. If anything, I would have guessed that the forged wheels would ride stiffer due to less flex.
I'm off to racing.
^^ the combined tire and wheel weight makes a 4 and 6 lb difference much less of an overall affect (under 10%). Exactly where the weight differs matters too. It certainly isn’t at the outer diameter as the same tires account for that. Could be the cast rim is stiffer than the aftermarket’s rim, which is probably thinner as it’s rolled. Surely not the case here but I’ve yet to hear a person who bought marginally lighter wheels not believe they can feel the difference. I’m betting the aftermarket rim has some comparative flex to it.
That GT3 Tour file is fantastic! Just gave it a try on my 991.1 S today. Firmer, sharper, even gear changes feel more solid.
Last edited by AdamSanta85; Sep 18, 2020 at 09:51 PM.
^^ the combined tire and wheel weight makes a 4 and 6 lb difference much less of an overall affect (under 10%). Exactly where the weight differs matters too. It certainly isn’t at the outer diameter as the same tires account for that. Could be the cast rim is stiffer than the aftermarket’s rim, which is probably thinner as it’s rolled. Surely not the case here but I’ve yet to hear a person who bought marginally lighter wheels not believe they can feel the difference. I’m betting the aftermarket rim has some comparative flex to it.



