Gearbox reset
Gearbox reset
Post by dennys » Tue Oct 30, 2012 5:02 pm
2. Click on the Start button without having your foot on the accelerator. At this point the lights on the dash will all light up.
3. Push the accelerator to the floor and hold it for about 30 seconds. For me at about 20 seconds I heard a very faint sound. This is the reset sound. Don't worry if you don't hear it. Just keep your foot on the pedal for about 30 seconds.
That's it. Now start the car and test it out. For me the acceleration from a stand still was much improved. I now don't feel like I need to drive in DS mode all the time.
dennys
Re: Gearbox reset
Post by MJim » Tue Oct 30, 2012 5:49 pm
I presume you mean without putting your foot on the brake in stage 2? Otherwise you'll be revving the nuts off it for 30 secs in stage 3 !
Spare: VW Golf V5
History: TVR Chimera 5.0
First Car: Peugeot 205 GTI 1.9
MJim
Re: Gearbox reset
Post by dennys » Tue Oct 30, 2012 6:46 pm
automatic transmission reset procedure: Turn on the car such that all the accessory lights are on but the motor is not running, depress the gas pedal all the way to the floor, keep the pedal there for 30 seconds and the transmission will reset to the original factory settings (it will "unlearn" the adaptive settings).straight from a BMW Technician
dennys
Re: Gearbox reset
Post by snipez999 » Tue Oct 30, 2012 8:54 pm
snipez999
Re: Gearbox reset
Post by MJim » Tue Oct 30, 2012 9:03 pm
Spare: VW Golf V5
History: TVR Chimera 5.0
First Car: Peugeot 205 GTI 1.9
MJim
Re: Gearbox reset
Post by 535dboy » Tue Oct 30, 2012 9:06 pm
@denny's, snipez999, thanks for clearing that up! Hope I'll never need to use a reset but useful to know how it can be done.
[/quote]
It's worth doing sometimes anyway.
2012 Audi RS4 (B8)
2012 Porsche Boxster S (981)
2008 Lotus Exige S (a bit modified!)
2015 Nissan Leaf twin turbo with Nitros
Previously :
2008 BMW X5 3.0sd MSport
2005 BMW 535d MSport
535dboy
Re: Gearbox reset
Post by MJim » Tue Oct 30, 2012 9:19 pm
Spare: VW Golf V5
History: TVR Chimera 5.0
First Car: Peugeot 205 GTI 1.9
MJim
Re: Gearbox reset
Post by snipez999 » Tue Oct 30, 2012 10:56 pm

snipez999
Re: Gearbox reset
Post by 535dboy » Wed Oct 31, 2012 6:19 am
Last time he lends the car to his Nan

[/quote]
Or PVR
2012 Audi RS4 (B8)
2012 Porsche Boxster S (981)
2008 Lotus Exige S (a bit modified!)
2015 Nissan Leaf twin turbo with Nitros
Previously :
2008 BMW X5 3.0sd MSport
2005 BMW 535d MSport
535dboy
Re: Gearbox reset
Post by MJim » Wed Oct 31, 2012 7:33 am
[quote="snipez999"]
Last time he lends the car to his Nan

[/quote]
Or PVR
[/quote]

Spare: VW Golf V5
History: TVR Chimera 5.0
First Car: Peugeot 205 GTI 1.9
MJim
Re: Gearbox reset
Post by Caesium » Fri Sep 27, 2013 8:13 am
2013 BMW E70 X5 40D MSport
Previously :
2008 BMW E92 335D MSport
2004 BMW E46 M3
2005 BMW E60 535D MSport
2002 BMW E39 530D Sport
The list goes on...
Caesium
-
- Member
- Posts: 303
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2010 12:36 am
Re: Gearbox reset
Post by gchristofi » Fri Sep 27, 2013 1:43 pm
gchristofi
Re: Gearbox reset
Post by moar » Mon Jun 16, 2014 3:22 pm
This is a throttle adaption reset.
The gearbox reset is done with DIS, ISTA, Autologic etc. It is plugged in and the transmission adoptions are reset where the TCU forgets everything it has learnt about the transmission and starts from scratch.
The thread title should be renamed, "throttle position reset."
moar
Re: Gearbox reset
Post by X5Sport » Mon Jun 16, 2014 9:45 pm
So what does it actually do? Is it a gimmick or actually worth doing?
Richard

X5Sport
Re: Gearbox reset
Post by moar » Tue Jun 17, 2014 9:35 am
This is why people think the engine has come to life and feels alot more nippy!
The throttle is self learning on older cars, it notices driving styles etc etc. Overtime if a previous owner has been lethargic over their driving, the throttle and gearbox get used to it and start getting into the highest gear ASAP.
When you reset the throttle, it forgets all of this and starts from scratch. It doesn't know what the driver wants so it sticks to "normal" driving or what is presumed to be more "sensitive."
I never think it's worth doing, if you plan on driving aggressively you keep the gearbox in sport mode. The other option is to drive normally which D will do perfectly fine. Why you would want D to be reset all of a sudden I don't know why.
moar
- Forum
- ↳ Forum Discussion
- ↳ New members section
- BMW X1
- ↳ General X1 Forum (F48 - 2nd gen : 2015+)
- ↳ General X1 Forum (E84 - 1st gen : 2009+)
- BMW X2
- ↳ General X2 Forum (F39 : 2018+)
- BMW X3
- ↳ General X3 Forum (G01 - 3rd gen : 2017+)
- ↳ General X3 Forum (F25 - 2nd gen : 2011+)
- ↳ General X3 Forum (E83 - 1st gen : 2003+)
- BMW X4
- ↳ General X4 Forum (F26 - 1st gen : 2014+)
- BMW X5
- ↳ General X5 Forum (G05 4th-gen, 2018+)
- ↳ General X5 Forum (F15 3rd-gen, 2014+)
- ↳ General X5 Forum (E70 2nd-gen, 2007-2013)
- ↳ General X5 Forum (E53 1st-gen, 2000-2006)
- ↳ Problems (sub-forums for all models)
- ↳ Problems (F15 3rd-gen, 2014+)
- ↳ How-To
- ↳ Problems (E70 2nd-gen, 2007-2013)
- ↳ How-To
- ↳ Problems (E53 1st-gen, 2000-2006)
- ↳ How-To
- BMW X6
- ↳ General X6 Forum (F16 2nd-gen replacement, 2014+)
- ↳ General X6 Forum (E71 - 1st gen : 2008-2015)
- ↳ Problems (sub forums for specific models)
- ↳ Problems (E71 1st-gen 2008-2014)
- ↳ How-To
- BMW X7
- ↳ General X7 Discussion (G07, 2018+)
- General
- ↳ General car-related discussion
- ↳ Gallery
- ↳ Meets/Events
- ↳ The lounge
- ↳ On the light side
- ↳ Other Marques
- ↳ Buy and sell
- Links
- ↳ Z4-Forum