Getting a remap with reduced torque settings defeats the purpose of getting a remap imo.
Have to disagree there. There are plenty of people who want a noticeable performance increase but without the cost & hassle of having to get a new clutch.
I got my Upsolute map altered to reduce peak torque, it's only reduced by a small amount between roughly 2-3k rpm, even then it's still a lot higher than stock - around 270-280lbft peak, compared to stock 229lbft.
Top end power is exactly the same as the "normal" remap, achieved around 175bhp at Awesome RR.
When you're going for max acceleration through the gears, you never drop below 3-3.5k, so because the torque is reduced at lower RPM than that, you still have exactly the same power available as the normal remap and won't be disadvantaged.
Before my map was altered, my clutch (PD130 Passat) would slip anywhere between 2-3k with even the
lightest throttle application in 4th/5th/6th gears.
So all this "don't boot it below 2k" advice had no effect, and not being able to apply the throttle below 3k rpm was just ridiculous.
It's luck of the draw with clutches, some standard ones will stand up to being abused with 300+lbft, some will slip with
280-290lbft.
I'm happy with my slightly altered map. Never had a single hint of clutch slip since, and this is on a clutch with nearly 95k miles on it. The same remap on my last Passat was fine on the original clutch even past 140k miles.
Would I rather pay £XXXs on an uprated clutch for the sake of maybe 20lbft extra across a low down, narrow rev band ? No...that sort of money buys a brake & suspension upgrade which has far more effect on driving enjoyment.