????? My car does not exhibit this behavior at all when I use heel/toe down shifting.
I have seen Audis do what you describe and would notice it when I tried using a light brake pedal action while driving slowly (continuous throttle) to clean off my brake rotors after washing the car. This works fine on my Z4 and I see no evidence of a throttle cutout when the brake pedal is depressed.
Seeing as the general consensus is this should not be the case it looks like a problem... gonna drop this in the problem section until we hear any different.
I have an update on my car. So during the last week, my "Service Engine Soon" (aka Check Engine Light) came on. Got the car scanned and it was the Mass Airflow Sensor. BMW replaced the part under warranty and EUREKA, I can heel and toe in the car now!!!
given my posting above about how the problem got fixed, can anyone explain it?? how does getting a new mass airflow sensor fix the problem of the brake disabling the throttle??
something to do with the engine management?? how would it make sense that the car is trying to protect itself by not allowing the brake and throttle to function at the same time just because the mass airflow sensor isn't working properly??
yes, agreed, clearly it was software which is why i wasn't too concerned. independently, the brake and throttle worked fine, so it must have been software
i'm not 100% familiar with the inner workings of a car, but i'm no rookie either. is there any possible reason that the Mass Air Flow sensor would cause the original problem?? i'm thinking perhaps by throwing that code, the computer just went koo koo until a tech reset the obd2