The torquedrive has guide tracks for the guide pins that are attached to the shaft of the fixed driveface.
Because of these guides, when the torquedrive moves sideways to open or close the rear pulley, it also has to turn relative to the fixed driveface. The drive belt is clamped tight between these two parts, so it will take a certain number of rotations for the pulley to open or close because the belt will have to slip between those surfaces (in a dynamic way, not really slipping)..
This means that the upshifting of the CVT on acceleration is delayed by a certain amount, and it also means that the torque of the engine has some influence on the balance between roller weights and contra spring, increasing the rpm a little when you open the throttle...
Because of these effects, the shape of the guide tracks in the torquedrive has a lot more influence on the way the CVT works than the shape of the ramps in the variator ever will...
If you're looking for maximum performance, the CVT should keep the engine at the rpm where it delivers its maximum power during acceleration, and the standard Kymco Agility torquedrive with its curved guide tracks just won't do that, no matter what type of variator you have !!
Funny thing is that all Kymco scoots that are actually made in Taiwan already have straight guide tracks in their torquedrives... It's just the Agility and other cheap Kymco types that are made in China which have the curved guide tracks - and also most chinese 139QMB scoots and cheap replacement parts have this configuration, which I regard as a fault instead of a feature
Get a torquedrive from Malossi or NCY instead of one of those crap variators and you'll be happy