I'm in San Diego and for a few years I was flying SR22T and SR22TN, one of which was an absolutely beautiful dry lease from one of our own PoA members here.. anyway, I'm also a member of Plus One and they don't have any turbo'd planes.. up until this year I was flying a mixture of both, about 120 hrs/year (as much as I love the Cirrus, to near fanboy status, I am now flying multis.. eventually I'd like to buy an Aztec)
My observations:
Cirrus Sr22's in both turbo and non-turbo
--there's a g1 NA SR22 in our club that I fly as my "go-to" and it's been to Lake Tahoe (6,264 elev) and Big Bear (6,752 elev) many times, including the sweltering hot summer months. Many departures where right near the max performance limits of the plane's envelope and it performed exactly as advertised in the POH. Personally, if you plan right it's generally a non-event. Never had any "yikes" moments.. climb rate was still generally decent, again, exactly as the POH said it would be. For these though I do a full power run up to get the mixture set right (NA). Plan the departure right, and runway permitting I'll keep the climb super shallow until I get 100+ KIAS before starting the climb out. I want to say I was still getting 300-500 fpm. Cirrus really did a nice job designing the plane!
The Turbo planes at these airports (including a trip to Telluride (9,078 elev) sort of felt like cheating. You basically punch it, get 100% of your power, and off you go. The climb is only marginally different (air is still thinner after all)
The biggest thing I miss with an NA plane, and why if (err, when) I buy it will be turbo is that I max out on altitude around 10-11K.. the SR22 will go higher, but there's no real speed advantage.. the sweet spot seems to be that 8K-10K neighborhood. It sort of just feels like "wasted displacement" to have this nearly 10 liter engine up there that's barely coughing out 60% power at those altitudes. There's nobody up at 16K-17K and the air tends to be much smoother.. crossing the rockies at 17K is basically a non event. And given the altitude constraint you do have to plan your routes a bit more carefully around the mountains and be more vigilant of the winds
The g1 SR22 settled in around 168-172 TAS at the 8K-10K range. The T and TN I flew were in the 180-185 neighborhood.. obviously going faster as you go higher
Oh.. one more thing
--the NA planes are super easy to fly. The T and TN required very careful baby sitting of the CHTs.. meaning, that on hot days you would occasionally need a step climb stop at 10K to cool them down. The G5 SR22T I was flying loved to seriously over boost on take off so you had to be very ginger with the throttle. Flying at higher altitudes you also have some vapor lock and other considerations to be cognizant of
But, given the choice I would always pick turbo!