also depends on how a car is tuned. SUVs and trucks torque ranges are very low. Even cars with the same engine but in a different type of car such as a g35 and fx35, the fx35 torque comes in sooner to help accelerate with the added weight but dies in the top end. Same 3.5VQ engine, just tuned differently.
Just how "the same" those engines are varies. Is an engine the "same" if theres a different cam in it? Similar example is the KA24... used both in the Nissan trucks and 240SX of appropriate years... but if you swapped one for the other... you wouldn't recognize it as being the same engine. Even if you're not changing physical parts, todays ECUs can be retuned to basically shape the power curve however you see fit (within obvious limits of course)...
however, we've now strayed significantly from the OP's point.
Strange...I've driven both on highways and on mountain roads with 4 passengers in the car and really didn't feel that the car became sluggish. Now, I'm not gonna say it felt the same because that would just be an ugly fanboyish lie, but I shure as hell didn't feel it became sluggish.
Then again, on neither occasions did I really try to push the car, I was just squeezing the throttle just enough to keep me entertained/concentrated while leaving a big margin for error (mmm mountain road..drool). Maybe after almost 10 months of driving the car I still don't get used to all the torque![]()