I agree with you completely. If your combo is spooling up just fine and you're happy with running around town with that stall speed, I see absolutely no reason to bother with nitrous.
The plan to use nitrous with a combination should be a forethought so that the rest of the combo can be set around the planned use of nitrous. If your combo was planned without nitrous in the picture, then most likely if all the components were picked correctly, you shouldn't need nitrous.
Some of the things to consider when putting a combo together with the forethought of using nitrous would be:
Torque converter stall. You can go with a tighter, more efficient T/C without worrying about turbo spool up time.
Cubic inch displacement. You can go with a smaller cube engine in relation to the turbo size without worrying about spool up time. Making the expense of stroking unnecessary.
Static compression ratio. You can go with a lower static compression ratio for a safer build without worrying about spool up time.
Turbo sizing. You can go with a relatively large turbo for your engine size to get better top end efficiency without worrying about spool up time.
Launch stradegies. For drap racing you can taylor the shot size and tuning to get the best 60 ft. possible without having to go through the drama associated with turbo drap cars. You can stage and leave as if you were driving a naturally aspirated car.
Instantaneous performance. If your searching for absolutely zero turbo lag. Nothing beats a nitrous/turbo combination. Nothing.
So much planning goes into a turbo engine with turbo spool time being such a big factor when picking specs for the engine.
When you are picking the specs for a turbo engine with the forethought that nitrous will be used, it's like being set free. There is so much more ground to explore with a nitrous/turbo engine.
The plan to use nitrous with a combination should be a forethought so that the rest of the combo can be set around the planned use of nitrous. If your combo was planned without nitrous in the picture, then most likely if all the components were picked correctly, you shouldn't need nitrous.
Some of the things to consider when putting a combo together with the forethought of using nitrous would be:
Torque converter stall. You can go with a tighter, more efficient T/C without worrying about turbo spool up time.
Cubic inch displacement. You can go with a smaller cube engine in relation to the turbo size without worrying about spool up time. Making the expense of stroking unnecessary.
Static compression ratio. You can go with a lower static compression ratio for a safer build without worrying about spool up time.
Turbo sizing. You can go with a relatively large turbo for your engine size to get better top end efficiency without worrying about spool up time.
Launch stradegies. For drap racing you can taylor the shot size and tuning to get the best 60 ft. possible without having to go through the drama associated with turbo drap cars. You can stage and leave as if you were driving a naturally aspirated car.
Instantaneous performance. If your searching for absolutely zero turbo lag. Nothing beats a nitrous/turbo combination. Nothing.
So much planning goes into a turbo engine with turbo spool time being such a big factor when picking specs for the engine.
When you are picking the specs for a turbo engine with the forethought that nitrous will be used, it's like being set free. There is so much more ground to explore with a nitrous/turbo engine.