"Torque rise, or torque reserve, is a measure of the lugging capability of an engine — the low-end power it can churn out when the going gets tough and the engine revs down — and the general rule of thumb is, the more torque rise, the better. When the engine sounds like it’s about to bog down and stall, and then it just keeps on going, like the Energizer rabbit, you can hear the torque reserve.
You can see torque reserve, too — mathematically. Look up peak torque and torque at rated horsepower on the engine spec sheet. Divide peak torque by torque at rated horsepower; carry it out to two decimal places — the answer will be 1 followed by a two-digit number. Knock off the 1 and that’s the torque rise. For example, 1. 27 would be 27 percent torque rise; a rating of 30 percent would be better — the higher the percentage, the more torque reserve the engine can deliver. That’s “lugging capacity. ”
This doesn’t matter much in your car. It matters more in your truck, especially if you go off-road or have to start off slow with a heavy tow load, like pulling a big boat out of the water.
But it matters a lot to construction equipment. Take an articulated wheel loader, for instance, challenged by extremely heavy loads at slow speeds and rough underfoot conditions. That’s no time to have the machine cough and wheeze. That’s why they put that beefy diesel in there; it has plenty of torque reserve. Diesel can run much higher BMEP and generate higher torque rise. (The British term for torque reserve is “backup,” which explains it pretty well. )"
Found that little snippet. Why do these light duty truck diesels not have any torque rise? The cummins actually has less than 1 percent torque rise. To have big torque rise significantly hampers hp output. So that must be why they removed it.