First off, to answer the titular question here of "when to change a discussion question to a feature request" is essentially never, unless it was just asked and is clearly a feature request instead of a discussion. If you would like to create a feature request, then ask that question; if you would like to create a discussion, then ask that question.
In order to create a new feature that changes an aspect of a large piece of legacy software like Stack Overflow maintains, you absolutely must provide evidence and material supporting your case. As a result of that being the situation, often feature requests are preempted with a fact finding and community consensus discussion. It is rare that actual features are implemented solely as the result of discussions.
The discussion you cite is not a fully fledged feature request, and neither is the answer you cite as the reason it should be. Robert Harvey is a very respected user here, but even he says that a solution with "any chance of succeeding" would look like his suggestion. Note the lack of definition in chance, or what success would be measured with.
Successful feature requests need to be backed with rigor, not with votes that indicate it would be nice if something were done. It is easy to sit around and point fingers at problems, but proposing solutions backed by evidence and rigor is how problems actually get solved.
Make no mistake, the Stack Overflow team reads all of these. I am sure they voted on the question you cite, and countless others. That doesn't mean they know what the solution is to each and every problem they observe, nor that their vote is somehow binding in agreement to implement suggested directions to solve problems. If there was a well researched, rigorous, suggestion which solved a problem without dispute and had clearly defined beneficial outcomes, they would implement it 6 times out of 8 weeks.
If you are still legitimately curious about the process of feature requests, please see "The challenges of persuading a large, critical audience" by Shog9, it is excellent.
As for the team not listening, let's just look at some of last month's highly upvoted feature requests on Meta Stack Exchange. Here are some which were responded to by the team where they were implemented or are planned on being implemented:
I am sure more research with regards to feature requests from the community being planned or completed beyond one month will also yield even more results.