Finally, picked up mine. And apparently the joy of driving blew some of my brain out, as I have two probably stupid questions.
First one is about steptronic - you shift the lever to the left, and transmission goes from D mode to SD mode, and shifts gears for you; fine, so you shift gears manually once and it goes to manual mode, giving you gears m1 to m6, and does not shift automatically anymore (at least does not shift in reasonable rpm range, which I did not dare to exceed due to the break-in period), which is exactly what one would expect. But, the question is, how the hell are you supposed to stop in the manual mode (say at traffic light) without going out of manual mode back to D or N? I mean there doesn't seem to be a N in manual mode at all...
Second is related to unpleasant discovery which my previous car was completely oblivious of - apparently some highways here have stretches made of concrete blocks, and sometimes combination of uneven joints, length of the block and short z4 wheel base results in one damn-hold-your-lunch-down ride. Fortunately, that combination doesn't seem to occure often. On a beaten asphalt with potholes and cracks all around the ride feels normal, as long as they are irregular. The question is, if I get tired of that, would changing rft to conventional tires be of any help? I've seen posts indicating that hard ridges of rft tires contribute to the stiffness of the ride, but I am not exactly sure if it is the stiffness itself that creates this particular problem.
Thanks
First one is about steptronic - you shift the lever to the left, and transmission goes from D mode to SD mode, and shifts gears for you; fine, so you shift gears manually once and it goes to manual mode, giving you gears m1 to m6, and does not shift automatically anymore (at least does not shift in reasonable rpm range, which I did not dare to exceed due to the break-in period), which is exactly what one would expect. But, the question is, how the hell are you supposed to stop in the manual mode (say at traffic light) without going out of manual mode back to D or N? I mean there doesn't seem to be a N in manual mode at all...
Second is related to unpleasant discovery which my previous car was completely oblivious of - apparently some highways here have stretches made of concrete blocks, and sometimes combination of uneven joints, length of the block and short z4 wheel base results in one damn-hold-your-lunch-down ride. Fortunately, that combination doesn't seem to occure often. On a beaten asphalt with potholes and cracks all around the ride feels normal, as long as they are irregular. The question is, if I get tired of that, would changing rft to conventional tires be of any help? I've seen posts indicating that hard ridges of rft tires contribute to the stiffness of the ride, but I am not exactly sure if it is the stiffness itself that creates this particular problem.
Thanks