This evaluation is not exactly correct. Holding the brakes has nothing to do with building load. Holding brakes or not, the load on the prop will be exactly the same as the rpm increases with open throttle.
2nd the increased pressure is not do to the load on the car as you state, but it is do to the throttle being open more at the same RPM when the car is under load.
HiTech
If the plane is not moving, there is a greater load on the engine. It takes a certain amount of energy to make the plane move. If that energy is produced by the engine at a given RPM at a given throttle opening, if the plane does not move at that speed, where does that energy go? In other words, at wide open throttle and 3000 RPM, an engine produces 1600HP, and the plane flies at 360MPH at sea level. If the same plane is sitting on the runway at wide open throttle and at 3000 RPM, where does the energy go?
No, on my car, and most other turbocharged cars, you cannot build the same amount of boost at wide open throttle in neutral as you can in gear and loaded against the brakes and the torque converter. If you simply open the throttle in neutral, the engine will rev with little or no load and create much less boost. Mine might make 5 psi even as high as 5000 RPM in neutral sitting still, but it will make 15 psi at 2500 in low gear sitting still.