View Poll Results: peak hp, or under the curve hp
Peak HP
53
11.60%
Under the curve
404
88.40%
Voters: 457. You may not vote on this poll
peak horse power, or under the curve power! what do you prefer?
#141
Maybe a little off topic but here is something to think about.
Something I learned in 4 yrs of Hp motorsports in college.
Horsepower = torque x RPM / 5252 Thats the formula
Torque is a measurement of twisting force
Horsepower is the amount of work that can be acomplished.
Horsepower is where its at. Torque can be raised with gearing. Horsepower cannot.
Examples.
456 hp semi engine
456 hp and 1200 ft lbs @ 2000 rpm
456 hp small block
456 hp and 400 ft lbs at 6000 rpm
Gear the small block with 3x the gearing and you have the same tq # at the same rpm as the diesel. - the loss of power in the gears but you get the point.
Granted the torque curves will be different. But for those who didnt know how hp is calculated now you know.
Something I learned in 4 yrs of Hp motorsports in college.
Horsepower = torque x RPM / 5252 Thats the formula
Torque is a measurement of twisting force
Horsepower is the amount of work that can be acomplished.
Horsepower is where its at. Torque can be raised with gearing. Horsepower cannot.
Examples.
456 hp semi engine
456 hp and 1200 ft lbs @ 2000 rpm
456 hp small block
456 hp and 400 ft lbs at 6000 rpm
Gear the small block with 3x the gearing and you have the same tq # at the same rpm as the diesel. - the loss of power in the gears but you get the point.
Granted the torque curves will be different. But for those who didnt know how hp is calculated now you know.
gear ratio has nothing to do with the power output of your engine and is not even pertinent to the conversation the OP started...
Last edited by gectek; 08-20-2008 at 12:24 PM.
#142
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that is a very irrational way to look at it, even on a dyno, it will calculate the gear ratio out of the equation...so by tq multiplication you may effectively have a similar setup, but in reality you do not, #1 diesel engines dont pull rpms...plus gearing effects acceleration and everything else. but you did not factor in tire height as well...that effects the overall gear ratio and the over all tq multiplication of your method...maybe you should be more thorough and actually compare apples to apples, what you said is not entirely true...you WONT have the same tq at the same RPM because you dont measure it like that, if that were so, then you could gear a car from 2.73 to 4.56 and see astronomical results...get your figures straight first...the only thing you said that was relevant was the formula and that has been said already
gear ratio has nothing to do with the power output of your engine and is not even pertinent to the conversation the OP started...
gear ratio has nothing to do with the power output of your engine and is not even pertinent to the conversation the OP started...
If you gear a car from a 2.73 to a 4.56 the car will have more torque at the wheels but at a slower speed. The horsepower will still be the same. Other than the difference in frictional losses.
By the way swap some 2.73s to a set of 4.56s you will see a huge difference in how the car pulls.
Simple auto math not rocket science.
Last edited by 2002_z28_m6; 08-20-2008 at 12:50 PM.
#143
I have my facts straight. You completely missed my point. I was showing that for an example of how horsepower is figured. Did I say that they would be just as fast or pull just as good or have an average hp that was the same NO.
If you gear a car from a 2.73 to a 4.56 the car will have more torque at the wheels but at a slower speed. The horsepower will still be the same. Other than the difference in frictional losses.
Dont over think this. Its simple auto match its not rocket science.
If you gear a car from a 2.73 to a 4.56 the car will have more torque at the wheels but at a slower speed. The horsepower will still be the same. Other than the difference in frictional losses.
Dont over think this. Its simple auto match its not rocket science.
gear ratio isnt going to effect power under the curve. neither is HP or TQ at one rpm. power under the curve was determined earlier being between x and 5252, most diesels wont pull that, so why compare them in the first place...what you said is irrelevant and it all fell apart anyway and you are just upset because i busted your 4yrs of HP education ego bubble...
you were the one trying to spout out "simple" math that your learned brain can only comprehend
#148
besides it only too me 3 posts to pwn you anyway
Last edited by gectek; 08-20-2008 at 02:05 PM.
#151
well seriously though, area under the curve is where it is at...peak power is nice, but from off idle to roughly 6k is going to be the best for all around street driving, but i see what the other guys mean in staying at "peak power" but why would you want peak at the beginning of every shift from 2 on when you get out of peak so soon, why not have a shift go into the broader and higher range of the power band and keep on from there, that way you have more usable area for street driving/urban combat. everyone runs slower on the street anyway, and as well they should, because it isnt always you or the cops you have to watch for, its the other people on the road that dont know you are in full out Mr Hyde mode...
and HP is how fast you get to the wall, TQ is how far you take the wall with you
and HP is how fast you get to the wall, TQ is how far you take the wall with you
#152
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Yeah there is my explaination of the true definition of Horsepower. Then you have gectek the redneck giving his explanation "HP is how fast you get to the wall, TQ is how far you take the wall with you" Last time I raced I was trying to avoid walls not get to them and take them with me. Seriously