
Power and Torque?
#1
Posted 26 January 2000 - 04:56
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#2
Posted 26 January 2000 - 13:01
In effect nearly all F1 engines produce a similer peak torque figure as the Volumatic Efficiency of the engines are probably more or less identical as cylinder head design is such a known quantity these days, the more powerful engines are the ones that are able to make the torque further up the rev band.
#3
Posted 26 January 2000 - 18:16
I like to explain the relation between power and torque with two guys carrying sandbags. One is big but slow and can carry 2 bags at the time but can only go one round per minute. The other is small but quick and can only carry one bag but goes 2 rounds per minute. Even though the big guy is stronger(more torque) the small guy makes it up with speed(revs) so they ultimatly do the same work(generate the same power).
Of the two it is the peak power that best represent the performanc of an engine.
One thing I have observed is that engines with the same displacement(no supercharging) often have similar peak torque figures but can have very different peak power outputs because they are tuned for different rev ranges.
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Ursus
Trust me, send money.
[This message has been edited by Ursus (edited 01-26-2000).]
#4
Posted 26 January 2000 - 18:32
One often used is HP/1000revs/L/Atm
- horse power per thousand rpm per litre of engine size per atmosphere of boost (Obviously 1 for naturally asirated and >1 for supercharged)
Improving the breathing characteristics of an engine should flow through as an increase in the calculated figure. Increasing the revs (while maintaining air flow) gives more power without an increase in absolute efficiency.
It can be suprising to see how similar various engines actually are and can be used as a "first cut" design tool. What revs would I need for 300hp out of 2L, or what boost etc etc etc.
#6
Posted 04 February 2000 - 08:55
According to someone earler in this thread the HP of an engine is the Torque times the RPM but would it not be better to have more Torque at lower revs which would have a lower HP but it would have more power when you are accelerating not just at top speed.?
I may be completely wrong, as I realy dont have any idear about what I am saying.
#7
Posted 04 February 2000 - 21:48
A good example of this is with production motorcycle engines which produce huge bhp figures but low torque. In bikes, as in racing cars, torque is not so important because of the light weight to be moved. As long as you have the bhp power, you are OK. But put such an engine in a heavy car and it would really struggle - for instance put the Ilmor-Mercedes lump into a hefty 2000kg Mercedes saloon, and you would have some trouble getting it moving - the clutch wouldn’t last very long - mind you, it could be fun once you got going!
An interesting example of the values of torque versus bhp was in the 1999 British Rally Championship, where VW entered a Golf turbodiesel. The car was the same spec otherwise as the petrol cars, but it had only some 200bhp agianst their 300+bhp. However, it also had huge amounts of torque. In rallying, torque is very much more valuable than racing because you have hundreds of different corners rather than the average race track’s 10 or so, and you can’t set the car up exactly for all of them. So the ability of an engine to pull from the "wrong" revs is very important.
The results for the VW Golf Tdi were impressive, the best being a 2nd overall on the all-tarmac Manx International Rally. This was down to power delivered pretty evenly from 2,000 to 5,000 rpm.
The ideal would be to have loads of torque and loads of bhp, but at our present level of knowledge, there has to be a trade-off towards the one that is the most useful.
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BRG
#8
Posted 04 February 2000 - 21:55
Something I have always wondered about (mainly in connection with road cars) is efficiency of 'power vs fuel used'.
e.g. BHP/(Litres per second) (and possibly lbft/l-per-sec)
This would seem much more interesting than the 'Urban Cycle mpg' type figures, as it would tell you how well an _engine_ was converting petrol into performance.
Know anything about these sort of numbers?
#9
Posted 04 February 2000 - 22:06
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Ursus
Trust me, send money.
#10
Posted 05 February 2000 - 01:26
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BRG
#11
Posted 05 February 2000 - 10:35
#12
Posted 05 February 2000 - 12:27
You are quite right with your comments.
The previous "efficiency" (BHP/L/1000rpm/atm) is focused on speed around a race track as opposed to low running costs, and is somewhat like cardiovascular fitness of a human - how well does it breath.
Brake specific fuel consumption is probably the best measure of actual thermal efficiency of an engine. That is how well does it translate the energy in the fuel into thrust

Typically if you are looking at a naturally aspirated engine improving its actual horsepower will coincide with an improvement in BSFC. A happy coincidence

There is a great tech motorsport site at
http://www.performan....com/index.html
which is worth some time over several visits.
In Australian 5L touring car racing Gibson Motorsport have proved highly effective at optimising engines to performance and fuel efficiency. They dyno develop with O2 probes in each cylinder outlet and (I believe - that word again) have the computer set up to give them instantaneous BSFC figures. They typically get more laps out of a fuel limited tank than anyone else, without being short on oomph.
The qualification to all of this discussion is that we are talking N/A on petrol. Turbos can be made to make more HP by uping boost (no suprise there) but can then be made to accept yet more boost by retarding spark and running rich (it cools the combustion chamber) and keeps pistons and turbos alive.
Methanol and various nitro blends are not my field but I do know that methanol can (and often is) made to run quite rich which I presume is done for similar reasons.
#13
Posted 05 February 2000 - 23:14
>Brake specific fuel consumption is probably the best measure of actual thermal efficiency of an engine.
Indeed.
And I suggest this would probably be the most clever way of limiting performance.
Via a limit on allowed fuelflow we'd have a very close and welldefined tool for lowering "speed" (for safety reasons or whatever reasons) instead of limiting rpm's (F2 or BTCC) or volume (F1...) or air-flow (WRC) or boost (Cart/IRL), etc
>In Australian 5L touring car racing Gibson Motorsport have proved highly effective at optimising engines to performance and fuel efficiency. They dyno develop with O2 probes in each cylinder outlet and (I believe - that word again) have the computer set up to give them instantaneous BSFC figures. They typically get more laps out of a fuel limited tank than anyone else, without being short on oomph.
An other alternative could have been monitoring the EGT (& of each cylinder).
>Turbos can be made to make more HP by uping boost (no suprise there) but can then be made to accept yet more boost by retarding spark and running rich (it cools the combustion chamber) and keeps pistons and turbos alive.
What might happen with the BFSC when running overrich in boostapplications...
BR
M.Aaro
#14
Posted 08 February 2000 - 01:32
torque (ft. lbs) x RPM / 5252 = Horsepower
so 200ft./lbs of torque at 5252rpm would make 200-hp
#15
Posted 10 February 2000 - 11:00
#16
Posted 17 February 2000 - 06:11
#17
Posted 17 February 2000 - 08:15
#18
Posted 23 February 2000 - 01:59
On the road we may not bother shifting down as often so tourque is much more important to driveing feel and thrust.
#19
Posted 23 February 2000 - 05:52
Why no one has bothered building a decent triple beats me, they should slaughter the opposition!
Tak, there isn't a huge difference in peak torque between the 996 Dukes and the best 750 fours (RC45 last year) but the best fours make *much* more horsepower (by nature of making the torque further up the rev range.)
it's an old wives tale than twins produce more torque, they don't (per given capacity) it's simply that they do not rev (limited by heavy reciprocating mass), so the engine is obviously optimised to run strongly at lower revs and the lack of top end rush exaggerates the midrange punch.
A good example is compare a Ducati 996 SPS to a Yamaha R1, the Yamaha kills the duke in terms of torque and horsepower from tick over to the redline.
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#20
Posted 23 February 2000 - 07:11
[This message has been edited by desmo (edited 02-22-2000).]
#21
Posted 24 February 2000 - 00:08
The Ducati's carry their weight better then most of the fours, Dukes handling advantage is more significant than it's traction advantage. I expect the RC51s will fly and the press will say "see the Ducati had an engine advantage" - wrong. Honda had an engine disadvantage, the RC45s (V4) engine was large and compromised the wheelbase of the bike as well as the steering geometry and centre of gravity, Honda should have gone for a across the frame four like the other Japs and the bike would have been very competitive.
Ducati are lucky in that Honda screwed up with the design on the RC45, and Yamaha/Suzuki and Kawasaki haven't had the resources to compete and have only recently pulled their finger out. Expect a strong season from Yamaha and Suzuki, Plus Kawasaki will end the year by pensioning of the fast but bad handling ZX7 and start on a rebuilding exercise.
I think the ZX7 will be the fastest (speed) but slowest (laptimes) works effort in 2000.
That said, I agree with Ducati's design principal, the Jap manufacturers are obsessed with bigger and stronger two spar aluminium chassis, this is a blind ally, the Dukes steel trellis frame is lighter and stronger and carries it's weight lower - that's Ducati's real advantage, but the big four Japs are too proud to admit they've been wrong all these years with something as fundamental as frame design. Of course having Foggy pilot the thing could be considered quite an advantage for Ducati! The smoothest rider in the world with the highest corner speed allied with the bike that needs the smoothest riding to use it's only real advantage - corner speed!
#22
Posted 24 February 2000 - 15:14
#23
Posted 25 February 2000 - 03:45


