I noted some problems with this explanation further back in this thread. Brakes hold all the wheels, so where does the additional traction come from? So far, I've yet to hear a convincing hypothesis about how brake-throttle modulation could work. Also, no explanation of why a controlled experiment of BTM fails.
My own hypothesis - pending a better one - is that traction is often better when a wheel turns slowly, and using the brakes makes the wheels turn more slowly. So does less throttle...
Traction comes from a momentary redistribution of torque. Its not a solution where you go up a hill with one foot on the brake, and the other on the throttle. Its a solution where you use the brakes to equalize torque between a wheel in the air and a wheel on the ground to "bump" over an obstacle. It creates (just making up numbers, no actual number crunching) lets say a 80/20 split of torque for a few milliseconds, and that might be enough for the tire(s) on the ground to get enough traction and momentum to get the tire in the air back on the ground.
The other way to look at it, which is almost impossible to reliably do in real life, there X amount of friction/rolling resistance for the tire on the ground that needs to hit it before it moves, and using the brakes you can get close to X on the wheel in the air to lessen the path of least resistance. Balancing the amount of brake is the issue of trying to rely on its success in reality.
Hopefully this might shed some light on the theory of the idea.
ETA: It will not get you out of a 2 foot hole. It's abilities are probably limited to level 3-4 trails (scale of 10).
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