To respectfully respond to your respectful response...
About a year ago I would have agreed with you 100%, and that is the common thought process here on the TDR about turbo selection. But, when I was trying to figure out why my combo was so laggy for towing and was talking to everybody trying to figure it out, it was Van Haisley that turned on the light for me.
I look at it this way; there's two types of lag. The first, and the one that you bring up in your reply, is the time it takes a turbo to reach zero to full boost. Inertia plays a big part here, which is related in a big way to compressor diameter. More rotating mass = more time to reach boost. Important for 1/4 mile times, but not an issue for towing.
The second, and lesser talked about, is the lag that you have in steady-state mid-throttle operation. It has to do with the blade pitch on the compressor wheel. The larger diameter compressors also will typically have more blade pitch. More blade pitch means more resistance, and more resistance takes more drive power to overcome. In steady-state cruise, with all other factors remaining the same (ex turbine size, engine rpm, fueling level) an increase in compressor size/pitch will result in less boost and less charge air volume. The engine will generate roughly the same exhaust volume (energy) to drive the turbo, but the increase in load from the compressor will prevent the turbo from spinning up as high and generating as much boost (charge air volume).
In your DZ/14 vs. HX35/14 comparison you are only referring to inertia. Factor in drag from the blade pitch, and put it in a partial throttle scenario, and the DZ will not generate as much boost as the '35, thus resulting in higher egts.
With the trailer in tow, my DZ/14 will consistently run 5-10 psi less boost and 200* higher egts than my HX35/12.
The efficiency range of a compressor has two sides. There the top side that everybody seems to focus on (maximum useful boost), but don't forget about the bottom side. If the compressor isn't turning fast enough to get into it's efficiency range it will not move as much air as a properly sized compressor in it's efficiency range. So to get a larger compressor into its efficiency range at mid throttle, you'll need a tight housing with a wastegate. The small cross section will extract more energy from the exhaust and get the compressor into it's map sooner, and the wastegate will bleed off drive pressure once the compressor reaches the upper end of its map. But this is where the Holset's fall short, since they only 'gate 1/2 of the cylinders and they can't keep up with big HP. This is why I'm starting to favor the HTB series from HTT; they can 'gate all 6 and keep up with the flow.
I don't know if you followed the discussion about Clmsnow's HTBG. He started with the 'BG/14 and went to the 12 cm housing. There was a bunch of opposition to the change because the 12cm housing is "way to small" for the HP and egts would be high. But the end result was a slight
decrease in egts, since the compressor was driven into its map sooner and the fully wastegated housing could keep up. So you can't say that the 12cm housing is too small. The key to running small housings is a good wastegate. HTT is even running 12cm housings on their larger HTB2. Suggesting the 18. 5cm non-w/g housing is a bit extreme. That would result in a very narrow useful range waaay up in the rpms.
Caleb's mentioned that the truck would primarily be used for
towing, and that's how I answered. His mods are almost identical to mine, so I answered in light of what I would do to mine to improve its towing ability (
based on my actual experiences). If towing wasn't the primary function of the truck, I would have suggested the DZ/14. It performs well when empty and playing around, and it will keep 460hp cooled down to <1400*. But when you put a load on the truck everything changes and you really can't apply drag racing or dyno racing knowledge to towing needs. You need to select a turbo based on how you intend to use your power, not just how it cools on the top end.