Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
vetteracer said:
Is your 71 an LT-1 ?
vetteracer said:You’re welcome.
Horsepower gets its fame from marketing hype and the racing venue. In any engine designed for applications such as over the road trucks, RV’s, every day cars, piston airplanes, etc, torque and the torque curve is were it is at. Torque across a broad rpm and power range is key. This way you do not have an engine that makes all of its power at some small RPM range.
A good example is my corvette. It has a very high horse power rating, but the torque curve is horrible. There is not enough torque below 3000 RPM to do anything were high performance is concerned, but, at 4500 RPM and up it is a rocket. So the application would be impractical in every day use, pulling a trailer, etc.
Running max takeoff power is not practical and a more non-offensive setting is needed in cruise flight. If you had an engine with a very steep torque curve, versus a flat curve, you would have an engine that would fall on its face where power is concerned when you set cruise power. So a 500 HP motor with a peaky torque curve would be less beneficial then a 300 HP motor that made all kinds of torque across a broad range. The 500 HP would be great for takeoff, but nothing else.
High RPM and low manifold pressure are very hard on these types of engines. The force on the propeller from the ram air over powers the engine and the prop begins to drive the crank, instead of the crank driving the prop. This causes the pistons to "flutter" and can be very hard on the piston rings.
On the other spectrum, you have low RPM setting with Max manifold pressure. This is not as harmful as the other scenario, but it should be tolerated for takeoff only. There are provisions for this on Turbo charged aircraft that allow you to run over squared. This situation created high load and low RPM. With High RPM (with in reason) you have centrifugal stability and rigidity in the rotating crank and piston. When the rotation slows down, and power is increased, load can overcome the rotating stability and cause piston slap. This can also cause "PINGING" or pre-detonation. The Avgas we use prevents most of this due to the high octane.
Probably a lot more then you care to hear, but it is Sunday and I am bored.
Mark
That explains your interpretation of the torque vs horsepower discussion.......now a happy Integra GS-R owner.
Bus driver: they haven't removed the time element, it's still there, remember N means RPM and obviously RPM (revolutions per *minute*) has a time element.Bus Driver said:Vetteracer,
Thanks for the post, I’ve seen the TxN/5252 formula before and wondered about the 5252 constant. Or more specifically how does the SAE remove the time factor from the HP/torque constant of 1HP=33,000 ft.lbs/minute.
Thanks
As an aside, the truck's accelleration will also be quite crappy while pulling your house.Kingairrick said:Perfect example is the Honda s2000: 240 horsepower, AT 9000 RPM = no torque or crappy accelleration. Large deisel truck, only 300-400 horsepower but runs at around 1700 RPM=LOTS of torque, can pull your house...
Nice explanation, let's carry it a bit further.A Squared said:A foot-pound can be a unit of work, or it can be a unit of torque. The work unit has nothing at all to do with the torque unit, it is merely a confusing accident that they have the same name. Recently there has been an attempt to reduce this confusion by referring to torque units as pound-feet, but not everyone has adopted this convention so the confusion persists.
Here's a brief explanation of the two different foot-pounds:
Work: Work is ameasure of a force applied over a distance. If you have a box that takes one pound of force to move, and you move it one foot, you have done one foot-pound of work.
That is the foot-pound referred to in the formula 1 Hp =33,000 ft-lb/min. What this means is that in order to move that box 33,000 feet in one minute, or move a box, which takes 33,000 pounds to move, one foot in one minute will require one Horsepower. Horsepower is the rate of doing work. Now, notice that the discussion of this type of foot-pound has no mention of turning or twisting?, Just a force moved over a distance.
Torque. The other foot-pound is a unit of torque. Torque is a measure of twisting force. If you have a wrench one foot long, and you put it on a bolt and push on the end with one pound of force, that is a foot-pound of torque. You do not have to move the bolt, because torque is a force only, nothing has to move, as it does in *work*
Now if you take this torque *force* and combine it with rotation, you have work, (force and motion) and if you combine it with rotational speed (RPM) you have power (force, motion, and time) That's how you can get horsepower from torque and RPM
That's why HP= 33,000 ft-lb/minute and HP= FT-lb*RPM/5252 are so different, it's because the ft-lb in one is not the same as the ft.-lb in the other.
Does this help, or have I just further confused you and/or put you to sleep?
Hehe, good stir. Tounge in cheek or no, you still make a good point: revering RPM and ignoring power is silly, but no sillier than saying power doesn't matter, only torque. If RPM were all it took to make a car go fast, Corvettes would all be powered by a Dremel moto-tool, turning at 20,000 RPM (I suppose the extension cord would limit your range)I.P. Freley said:It's all about RPM, baby!
Just thought I'd stir the pot.![]()