I guess that depends if you want it to grip or not. The standard SEAT graph is quite similar reducing torque low down to keep the torque steer down, its wound back to allow it to get some traction.
Smooth as they come on the road, headline figures are not the be all and end all, because you still need to put all that power down onto the road.
If you want to win a RR shoot out then I'm sure its marvellous but out in the real world its pretty much unusable, without some traction modifications and some driver skill.
The graphs can appear steep when they are shortened, over a longer smoothing path they do not look as mountainous.
Smooth as they come on the road, headline figures are not the be all and end all, because you still need to put all that power down onto the road.
If you want to win a RR shoot out then I'm sure its marvellous but out in the real world its pretty much unusable, without some traction modifications and some driver skill.
The graphs can appear steep when they are shortened, over a longer smoothing path they do not look as mountainous.
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