Have just done a "very high speed, very high boost" test this night and found out that:
- acceleration in the 160-200 km/h range is much better;
- rpm raise in the 4000-6000 rpm range is much better;
- acceleration in the 200-220 km/h range is slightly improved;
- acceleration in the 220-230 km/h range has not improved at all.
That is, the car runs like a cheetah to 200 km/h, then (gearchange from 5th to 6th) accelerates gently from 200 to 220 km/h, then crawls slowly after many seconds with floored throttle to ~230 km/h.
Conclusion: opening up the path of air, despite what common knowledge said ("it will destroy torque at low rpm and improve engine breathing only at high rpm") works exactly at medium and medium-high rpms and speeds, at top speed the K03S turbo reaches it's limit and simply can't blow enough
Top speed it's like our grandparents from the 1930s said: not "top speed it's 230 km/h" but "it runs at 200 km/h with 30 km/h in reserve"
~Nautilus
- acceleration in the 160-200 km/h range is much better;
- rpm raise in the 4000-6000 rpm range is much better;
- acceleration in the 200-220 km/h range is slightly improved;
- acceleration in the 220-230 km/h range has not improved at all.
That is, the car runs like a cheetah to 200 km/h, then (gearchange from 5th to 6th) accelerates gently from 200 to 220 km/h, then crawls slowly after many seconds with floored throttle to ~230 km/h.
Conclusion: opening up the path of air, despite what common knowledge said ("it will destroy torque at low rpm and improve engine breathing only at high rpm") works exactly at medium and medium-high rpms and speeds, at top speed the K03S turbo reaches it's limit and simply can't blow enough
Top speed it's like our grandparents from the 1930s said: not "top speed it's 230 km/h" but "it runs at 200 km/h with 30 km/h in reserve"
~Nautilus