Just to put the figures into perspective, most modern performance diesel engines running in you Ford Focus or VW Golf or Peugeot 307 are producing some where in the region of 220 to 260 Nm ( 162.24 to 191.74 lb/ft)
I was reading the following link
http://www.revsearch.com/dynamometer/comments.html which gave the following equation for deriving hp from any given torque and rpm
hp = [torque (lb-ft) * rpm] / 5252
Therefore: hp * 5252 = torque (lb-ft) * rpm
Therefore: torque (lb-ft) = (hp * 5252) / rpm
Using the figures above = (900 * 5252) / 19000
= 4726800 / 19000
= 248.78 lb ft
Assuming peak torque is produced around 17500 rpm with say 870 hp then peak torque would be
= (870* 5252) / 17500
= 4569240 / 17500
= 261.10 lb ft
Which is pretty close Reca's peak @ 15500
This would be faily indicative of a modern F1 engine. One of the defining charactoristics of a modern F1 engine is its broad power band and associated flat torque curve across the upper rpm range
Excellent stuff getting the old grey matter pumping again
Thanks guys