Electronic Stability Program

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More commonly known by the generic term Electronic stability control (ESC). It is comprised of five components:

ABS (Antilock Brake System), EBD (Electronic Brake-force Distribution), ASR (Anti-Slip Regulation), EDL (Electronic Differential Locking), and MSR (Motor Slip Regulation).

ESP/ESC is a computerized technology that improves the safety of a vehicle's handling by detecting and preventing skids. When ESP/ESC detects loss of steering control, it automatically applies individual brakes to help "steer" the vehicle where the driver wants to go. Braking is automatically applied to individual wheels, such as the inner rear wheel to counter oversteer, or the outer front wheel to counter understeer. Some ESP/ESC systems also reduce engine power (ASR) until control is regained.[1]

Starting with MY2001, all S4s come standard with ESP. A button inside the cabin disables ESP's throttle intervention (ASR), and numbs ESP per wheel braking, but not EDL or MSR(?).

Fuse #42 can be pulled from the main fuse panel between the driver side door and the side of the console. This disables power to the ESP hydraulic pump?, which disables ESP and EDL (but not ASR/MSR?) intervention. Pulling fuse 42 may also alter brake biasing!

Pulling fuse #41 disables ESP, EBD, EDL and ABS (and ASR/MSR?)

Disconnecting the yaw sensor or wiring the hand brake signal input to GND will disable ESP per wheel braking, and ASR/MSR(?). EBD F:R biasing, EDL and ABS unaffected(?).

The engine ECU can be remapped[2] to numb or ignore CAN torque intervention signals from the ESP controller to mitigate (or disable) ASR/MSR.


ESP

Selectively applies braking to wheels (via per wheel ABS solenoid) if the ESP controller detects unintended yaw

Numbed but not disabled by ESP button?

Disabled (F:R proportioning left intact?) by removing fuse 41 or 42, removing the yaw sensor, or hardwiring the emergency brake signal input to the ESP/ABS controller to GND?

ABS

Antilock Brake System

Selectively pulses braking (via per wheel ABS solenoid) on wheels that are showing signs of locking up.

Is not disabled via ESP button.

Exists in non-ESP equipped cars.

Removing fuse 41 disables ABS and brake biasing!

Removing fuse 42 may alter brake biasing!

EBD

Electronic Brake-force Distribution

Controls the ABS F:R proportioning valve control (brake bias) (exists in non-ESP equipped cars?)

Disabled by removing fuse 41?

ASR

Anti Slip Regulation (a.k.a. traction control)

Reduces requested torque (slow intervention) and/or cuts timing (fast intervention) if the ESP controller detects wheel spin during acceleration, especially while turning

ESP equipped cars only?

Can be disabled via ESP button.

Can be overridden via map modifications in the ECU.

EDL

Electronic Differential Locking

Applies braking (via per wheel ABS solenoid) to a wheel that the ABS controller detects is losing traction under acceleration, thus redirecting torque to the opposite wheel (which presumably has more traction) through the open differential. Only active below a certain vehicle speed. The stock S4 threshold is 26mph (40kph)?. There is anecdotal evidence (and Audi documentation) that suggests the 40kph limit is for FWD vehicles only, and that the AWD threshold is 80kph.

Is not disabled via ESP button.

Exists in non-ESP equipped cars.

Can be disabled by removing fuse 41 or hardwiring the emergency brake signal input to the ESP/ABS controller to GND

Removing fuse 42 does not disable EDL?

MSR

Motor Slip Regulation (a.k.a. Engine Drag Torque Control)

Increases requested torque if the ESP controller detects wheel slip due to a sudden decrease in engine speed (torque braking), such as in sudden off-throttle conditions. Anti-stall also uses this mechanism.

Possibly not disabled via ESP button?

Exists in non-ESP equipped cars?

Can be overridden via map modifications in the ECU

References