tro|| said:
for about 2000rpm.....lol
what some of you forget is its where you have your torque and for how long that is important
Agreed. Gear ratios and how long the car can hold them etc...... are also very important. The variables that make a car 'fast' are too numerous to count.
As has been said before, just because the car has more torque, doesn't mean it's faster. Look at F1 cars, they have very low peak torque figures but, they have a lot of 'space' under the torque curve. And they use the gears ratios to maximise that torque. It's the 'torque multiplyer' effect. The same/similar thing is true of the Honda Type R's. They all have fairly low peak torque figures but, they have a very wide 'flat' torque curve and high rev limit that is maximised by the gear ratios to make them fairly quick. Of course, as has been mentioned, the cars weight helps a great deal too.
Without 'in gear' acceleration times, it's difficult to judge how fast that BMW actually is but, going on the not overly impressive 0-60 time (remembering that rear wheel drive and all that torque should help it off the line fairly well), I would think a fairly mildly modded GTiR would keep up with it !
Even a standard GTiR would be well on it's way to 75 mph by the time the beemer hit's 60 mph, from a standing start, with a decent launch. With a free flow filter and decent exhaust (decat) the GTiR should be very responsive on the move so, if it's in the right gear, with the turbo boosting, the GTiR will hold it's own at the very least !
All theoretical of course !