Turns out the day was incredible weather wise. Topped out in the low to mid 60s -- pretty much partial sun, overcast, partial sun all day. Dry as a bone. It was handy that the few days prior were somewhat wet as the track was pretty clean (despite goose grease in a couple of spots).
Generally ran with all the traction control software (the stuff that can be disabled with our one button) turned off, except in the first session, during which I forgot to turn it off. Probably could have tried to disable it on the main straight during that session although I was strapped down quite tight AutoX style -- so maybe not on second thought.
I did have an interesting observation though during that first session. We were red flagged and when I came to a stop at the next corner station, I noticed smoke coming from the front passenger side wheel well and billowing out of the engine bay. it was a little disconcerting. We were sent back to grid and took two more laps, one of which was actual cool down. Came back to the paddock and all seemed fine. But I do think leaving the nannies full on contributed to that overheating. Didn't help that we came to an immediate stop with no cool down during the red flag situation.
Here's a post event pic of that pad and rotor:
Seems fine. In fact, it's hard to believe I did 6 full sessions on those pads -- although I'll cop to focusing more on getting a feeling for the car (first track day in it) than wanting to test the car's performance edge. But I didn't exactly drive slowly (all the Miatas, vintage racer Alfas, and even a couple of BRZs and older Porsches in my session will attest to that). I just wasn't going all out.
I posted the same image with that notes I added to my build thread, where I'll kind of keep a running log of this kind of stuff until it gets too unwieldy.
In any event, I didn't really get a chance assess the controllable nannies in the wet yesterday. Maybe some time in the future, although I try to avoid wet events when possible. They're like driving around town in the rain for me (but a little faster). I'm not so keen on "testing the limits" in the wet at a track with concrete walls, so I hunt for the dry line, stay off that paint, brake straight, and work to stay steady as possible (very boring). I prefer a little trail braking and intentional dry track sliding for my fun.