The delayed turbo spool, is minimal when you make long time accelerations. When it is annoying, is on rallying or b roads with many turns, when during turns you want to control the behaviour of the car with small press and lift off accelerator movements. The difference between 2 good fwd cars (i20n, civic type-r ep3) both with lsd at the front is very noticable. At the ep3, there is a very linear behaviour, when you press the accelerator pedal or lift off, and car responds immediatelly. On the contrary in my i20n, you have to forcast and do the press - lift off, a fragment of the second previously, so the car will act a bit later. This is even more obvious with wagner intercooler in this particular way of driving (B-roads, tight turns or very mall circuits like megara in Greece).
As always you write a very interesting and thought provoking post. In the U.K. all my ‘spirited’ driving is of the rallying type of driving you describe and flat out full throttle is never more than a few seconds and often a second or less - most roads can be done entirely in 3rd with occasional dips to 2nd for tight turns. I think Hyundai have done some slightly strange things with the electronic speed of the throttle response - possibly to make it easier to drive at low speeds. I have a ‘pedal box’ and I realise how this works but it does allow the throttle to open significantly more quickly than even the most extreme Hyundai setting. As long as you are 3000rpm this means that boost is similar to the response of NA.
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