What Changed: Flex v8.1.1.0 at a Glance
On July 5, 2026, Magic MotorSport dropped Flex v8.1.1.0, and it is not a minor patch. This release extends the Boot Glitch unlock mode — first introduced in the prior major version — to a fresh batch of Bosch MDG1 ECUs built around the Aurix TC2xx microprocessor family. If you have been wrestling with locked MDG1 units on late-model FCA, BMW, or Ford Super Duty vehicles, this update changes the math: you can now bench-unlock them in-house, no RFT service required.
The Bosch MDG1 platform powers some of the most performance-critical diesel engines on the road — MultiJet III, BMW TwinPower Turbo diesels, and the 6.7L Power Stroke V8. Until now, independent tuners had limited options for accessing these ECUs without shipping them to a specialist or paying for remote unlocking services. Flex v8.1.1.0 puts the capability back in your workshop.
Which ECUs Are Now Supported?
Magic MotorSport added six specific ECU part numbers across three manufacturers. Here is the complete list:
FCA Group — Fiat Ducato (2021MY)
- Bosch MD1CS069 (TC299) — Ducato 2.2L MultiJet III, 118HP and 138HP variants
The Ducato is Europe's workhorse van. Fleet operators depend on these engines for delivery, logistics, and commercial transport. Being able to read, tune, and restore these ECUs in-house means faster turnaround for your commercial customers.
BMW — 2-Series & 4-Series Diesel MHEV
- Bosch MD1CS001 (TC298) — BMW 220d MHEV (2021MY) and 420d MHEV (2020MY)
BMW's mild-hybrid diesel powertrains combine a 2.0L TwinPower Turbo engine with a 48V starter-generator. The ECU manages both combustion and hybrid integration — making bench access essential for any serious tuning work. These are popular platforms in the European performance aftermarket.
Ford — Super Duty Power Stroke (2023MY)
- Bosch MD1CP006 (TC298) — F-250 Super Duty 6.7L V8 Power Stroke (474HP)
- Bosch MD1CP006 (TC298) — F-350 Super Duty 6.7L V8 Power Stroke HO (500HP)
This is the headline addition. The 2023 Super Duty platform uses a Bosch MDG1 ECU to manage the 6.7L Power Stroke — one of the most sought-after tuning targets in the North American diesel aftermarket. The High Output variant pushes 500HP and 1,200 lb-ft of torque from the factory, and the aftermarket appetite for unlocking these trucks is enormous. If your shop does heavy-duty truck diagnostics, this update makes Flex a must-check tool.

How Boot Glitch Works — and Why It Matters
Boot Glitch is a bench-mode technique that exploits a timing vulnerability during the ECU's startup sequence on Aurix TC2xx processors. Unlike traditional boot-mode methods that require opening the ECU case and soldering to test points, Boot Glitch uses a precisely timed voltage or clock perturbation to force the processor into a privileged state — giving the tuner full read/write access to both internal Flash and EEPROM.
The practical implications are significant:
- No RFT service needed. You do not ship the ECU anywhere. You do not pay for remote unlocking tokens. Everything happens on your bench.
- Full backup capability. Read the complete Flash and EEPROM before making changes — critical for recovery and warranty work.
- Boot Unlock included. Once unlocked, the ECU stays unlocked for subsequent tuning sessions.
Performance-wise, Magic MotorSport quotes Glitch connection times ranging from 10 seconds to 25 minutes depending on the specific ECU variant. Once connected, a full Flash read completes in roughly 2 minutes and 30 seconds, and a write takes about 2 minutes. That means most jobs — from backup to tuned write — can be completed in under 30 minutes on the bench.
What You Need to Get Started
This is not a free update for everyone. Boot Glitch functionality requires one of two license tiers:
- Flex Full Master (FLS0.5M) — the full unrestricted license
- Flex Full Slave (FLS0.5S) — the slave/partner license tied to a Master
If you already hold either license, v8.1.1.0 is available as a free update through the Flex software client. The update also includes firmware stability fixes that resolve specific error codes triggered after bench patching on earlier versions — so even if the new ECU support does not directly apply to your workflow, the firmware improvements alone are worth the install.

Where This Fits in the Bigger Picture
Magic MotorSport has been aggressive with the Flex platform in 2026. The v7.60.0.0 release in late June unlocked GPEC5 ECUs for Jeep and RAM applications without RFT. Now, barely two weeks later, v8.1.1.0 targets the Bosch MDG1 family — a far larger installed base spanning European passenger cars and American heavy-duty trucks. The pattern is clear: Magic MotorSport is systematically dismantling the RFT dependency model that has kept independent tuners tethered to paid remote services.
For independent ECU tuning shops, each Boot Glitch expansion reduces the number of ECUs you have to outsource. When combined with chip tuning tools that handle the calibration side, a single Flex unit can now cover GPEC5, MDG1, and the existing MEDC17/EDC17 families — giving you bench coverage across a substantial portion of the modern diesel ECU landscape.
The Bosch MDG1 is not going anywhere. It is the control unit behind everything from European delivery vans to American one-ton pickups. As these vehicles age into the independent aftermarket sweet spot (3-7 years old), the ability to unlock them in-house will separate shops that can say "yes" from shops that have to say "come back next week."

Bottom Line
Flex v8.1.1.0 is a targeted but high-impact update. It adds six new ECU variants — Ducato workhorses, BMW mild-hybrids, and the 2023 Ford Super Duty lineup — to the growing list of Bosch MDG1 units that can be bench-unlocked without RFT. If your shop competes in the diesel tuning market, particularly in Europe or North America, this update removes a recurring bottleneck from your workflow. The firmware fixes are a bonus. Install it.