That's your choice.
Personally, and given what I found with the braking on my car in particular, I'd rather get my car working in such a way that I've confidence in it not kicking in the ABS a bit too readily when pushed to its limits.
Having looked around these parts, I can see I'm not the only one of the opinion the ABS is oversensitive on these, either.
Because I've had it occasionally kick in on the road as well when perhaps it shouldn't have, but you weren't to know that from the original post...
Humm, yes I do.
If the ABS is kicking in too readily when the car is being punted along on a smooth race circuit, (which as an aside happens to also be covered liberally in sticky rubber from where drifting was also going on during the course of the day, never mind that dumped by race cars with slicks), then any improvements you can make to the car in a situation like this will make it an even better car on the road, where you have bumpy roads etc, causing weight over any wheel under heavy braking to vary more than it will on the track, and thus the ABS is even more likely to kick in.
Aside from all that, I've already discounted pulling the fuse to completely disable the ABS further up the thread.
I can just see that if at all possible, it would be beneficial if you could tweak the settings via VAG-COM to make the control unit slightly less sensitive; I suspect the extra deceleration given by the 312mm conversion is something which is at odds on occasion, with the parameters coded into the ABS control unit with regards to the braking rates of the standard calipers.
Indeed... but when it's doing that job too readily it's potentially dangerous, and needs to be sorted out if you're ever planning to drive at speeds slightly faster than your average Sunday driver.