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In my opinion, research, and own personal experience these one or two counts you are seeing ARE related to the Major version change in v220. Prior to the version change ignition corrections would ramp up much slower using OEM (I think) standards. Then if "3" counts were encountered then a cyl would pull back some timing. Now timing is ramped-up more quickly (and smoothly) to try and keep the car as close to knocking as possible (so power early in pull is not wasted), and as soon as one count is encountered, timing is held back on that cyl while still advanced on others, and if a second knock is counted then timing will be reduced for that cyl (not necessarily so much as to go negative, but could). You can see this in the fourth log posted in my OP. Based off of what we are getting from Cobb as well as some of the previous comments in this thread what we are seeing is not necessarily bad, maybe a tad on the aggressive side. I would worry more about the sustained negative corrections though. I have been monitoring knock counts lately rather than corrections and running a log to see what is happening with corrections at any given time, I'll reverse that and see how often/sustained I get negative corrections.
What for me indicates that the counts I am seeing are not false is the conditions that they happen in. Consistently only in higher gear WOT freeway pulls and always right around 4K rpm. Also, if I do a WOT freeway pull (5th) and baby the throttle up then WOT only after 4k..rarely if ever knock count. I will get a random knock count on cyl 4 occasionally others when hooning low gear blasting, never been worried about that.
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Very good reasoning, you definitely have a good picture of what's happening.
Knock is always contextual, and there are so many variables it can be daunting. Fuel temperature, air charge temperature, cylinder head temp, more obscure things like humidity are all going to affect combustion stability. The transient into full boost at lower RPMs near the torque peak *may* induce a slight combustion instability, and as such that may induce a knock count or two. That, combined with the significant BMEP tapering as RPMs rise, would strongly imply that knock is less prevalent at higher RPM. On top of that, engine noise in general is fairly exponential with RPM, so many knock filters taper their listening to zero or nearly zero near redline, because the sensor and DSP cannot discern between knock and noise at high RPM. Obviously the specifics are very engine dependent, I'm just giving an overview. Of course it's important to keep it in perspective; the BMEP we're seeing on this engine is hugely impressive for premium unleaded. Here's some perspective:
Honda S2000 AP1 = 189 PSI
Lotus Exige S w/ECU tune [300 HP] = 251 PSI
Fiat 500 Abarth = 307 PSI
MINI "F56" John Cooper Works = 319 PSI
My 1992 Miata with 260 HP Megasquirt 3 GT2554R turbo setup, an arms length away from bending all the con-rods = 354 PSI
2016 Ford Focus RS = 377 PSI
VW Golf R w/APR Stage 2 ECU tune = 481 PSI
FiST w/Stage 3 tune [est. 325 LbFt crank] = 505 PSI