Marki hit the nail on the head, you need to look at more than just a peak torque / rpm figure, the spreadis also a factor, perhaps a better way to "judge" an engine is by the area under the graph (be it power or torque)
The GS has a good 20BHP gain on the Corser, at the expense of a few rpm, considering it is an aircooled twin against a multi-cylinder liquid cooled engine (I assume the Corsa is 3 or 4 cylinders)
My ZZR1400 had about 170BHP at the wheels, double that of most four cylinder cars of the same capacity, but revved to 9,000rpm to achieve it, in a bike it was a torque monster, yet it would feel a lot flatter in a car, you could help by gearing it down from 200mph top end to 120 and it would make for a bloody fast hatchback engine - but still feel very buzzy and completely opposite to how it feels in the bike.
Twins tend to have good low-midrange torque compared to fours which may produce more torque on paper, but it is at higher revs.
Sometimes science and figures does not tell the full story, the best thing you can do is try to get a go on a single, twin and four cylinder bike and is possible with similar power outputs.
Try and ride something like a CBR600 then hop on a Ducati 849, or swap your GS for a Tiger 1050 for a couple of hours and then try a VFR800 - you will feel the difference that the numbers do not show.
The GS has a good 20BHP gain on the Corser, at the expense of a few rpm, considering it is an aircooled twin against a multi-cylinder liquid cooled engine (I assume the Corsa is 3 or 4 cylinders)
My ZZR1400 had about 170BHP at the wheels, double that of most four cylinder cars of the same capacity, but revved to 9,000rpm to achieve it, in a bike it was a torque monster, yet it would feel a lot flatter in a car, you could help by gearing it down from 200mph top end to 120 and it would make for a bloody fast hatchback engine - but still feel very buzzy and completely opposite to how it feels in the bike.
Twins tend to have good low-midrange torque compared to fours which may produce more torque on paper, but it is at higher revs.
Sometimes science and figures does not tell the full story, the best thing you can do is try to get a go on a single, twin and four cylinder bike and is possible with similar power outputs.
Try and ride something like a CBR600 then hop on a Ducati 849, or swap your GS for a Tiger 1050 for a couple of hours and then try a VFR800 - you will feel the difference that the numbers do not show.
