New 2019 Coupe Jerking/Bucking Issue
Your car should jerk and buckle like mad bull in S+. In comfort, it does every now and then while slowing down on 2nd gear, just remove your foot from the brake should ease the jerking. The engine braking is terrible on this car, uses zero torque converter which is retarded.
Your car should jerk and buckle like mad bull in S+. In comfort, it does every now and then while slowing down on 2nd gear, just remove your foot from the brake should ease the jerking. The engine braking is terrible on this car, uses zero torque converter which is retarded.
Trending Topics
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
Any oscillation of your foot, hesitation/indecision (pressing the accelerator pedal a little bit then backing off) will result in this behavior. If you're gently pressing the throttle and go over a hump in the road that causes your foot to dip into/back out of the throttle, you will get this behavior.
You can still drive at low speeds in S+ without experiencing this behavior, you just have to learn to "roll on" the throttle, instead of stabbing it with your foot. If you need to go to the brake, then decisively remove your foot from the throttle, rather than easing off of it.
The BMW M DCT (dual-clutch transmission) behaves the exact same way at low speeds. It was present in every M-DCT equipped E9X and F8X M3 I've ever driven.
Using this approach, I've only experienced 1 "rodeo ride" and that was down to user error on my end because of jerky throttle inputs on my end. Hope that helps.




As for your girlfriend, tell her your car is not a powder room nor a dining hall
Last edited by superswiss; Jul 10, 2019 at 09:02 PM.
Any oscillation of your foot, hesitation/indecision (pressing the accelerator pedal a little bit then backing off) will result in this behavior. If you're gently pressing the throttle and go over a hump in the road that causes your foot to dip into/back out of the throttle, you will get this behavior.
You can still drive at low speeds in S+ without experiencing this behavior, you just have to learn to "roll on" the throttle, instead of stabbing it with your foot. If you need to go to the brake, then decisively remove your foot from the throttle, rather than easing off of it.
The BMW M DCT (dual-clutch transmission) behaves the exact same way at low speeds. It was present in every M-DCT equipped E9X and F8X M3 I've ever driven.
Using this approach, I've only experienced 1 "rodeo ride" and that was down to user error on my end because of jerky throttle inputs on my end. Hope that helps.
As for your girlfriend, tell her your car is not a powder room nor a dining hall





Last edited by superswiss; Jul 10, 2019 at 10:19 PM.
Definitely understand where your concern was coming from, particularly if you had never encountered this behavior before. I first experienced when test driving a DCT-equipped E90 M3 several years ago.
Also experienced it on my C43 test drive. Once I discovered that the transmission behaved similarly to the M-DCT in S+, I just treated it as such. I've never experienced any of the bucking when in C or S.




Secondly, your car is dropping to 1st gear in comfort? Can you make a video of this and share here? Cause that is not normal.
It only drops to 1st gear when it comes to a complete stop and then restarts in 1st gear in Comfort mode. Is that normal? If not, I’ll do a video tomorrow.



