There are many variables to this question;
- What web server software are you using (Apache, nginx, IIS, lighttpd, etc)? This affects the lookup latency and how many simultaneous requests can be handled.
- What language is your system logic written in (PHP, Ruby, C, etc)? Affects memory usage and base speed of execution.
- Does your system rely on any external services (databases, remote services, message queues, etc)? I/O latency.
- How is your server connected to the outside world (dedicated line, dial-up modem (!), etc.)? Network latency.
One way to approach this is to first discover how many requests your webserver can serve up in optimal conditions, eg. serving a single static HTML page of 1 byte with minimal HTTP headers. This will test the web server's fundamental receive-retrieve-serve cycle and give you a good idea of it's maximum throughput (handled requests per second).
Once you have this figure, serve up your web application and benchmark again. The difference in requests per second gives you a general idea of how optimal (or sub-optimal) your app is.
Even the most modest of hardware can deliver thousands of responses given the right conditions.