Torque and Horsepower - A Primer

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pRo
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Torque and Horsepower - A Primer

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There's been a certain amount of discussion, in this and other files, about the concepts of horsepower and torque, how they relate to each other, and how they apply in terms of automobile performance. I have observed that, although nearly everyone participating has a passion for automobiles, there is a huge variance in knowledge. It's clear that a bunch of folks have strong opinions (about this topic, and other things), but that has generally led to more heat than light, if you get my drift :-). I've posted a subset of this note in another string, but felt it deserved to be dealt with as a separate topic. This is meant to be a primer on the subject, which may lead to serious discussion that fleshes out this and other subtopics that will inevitably need to be addressed.

OK. Here's the deal, in moderately plain english.


Force, Work and Time

If you have a one pound weight bolted to the floor, and try to lift it with one pound of force (or 10, or 50 pounds), you will have applied force and exerted energy, but no work will have been done. If you unbolt the weight, and apply a force sufficient to lift the weight one foot, then one foot pound of work will have been done. If that event takes a minute to accomplish, then you will be doing work at the rate of one foot pound per minute. If it takes one second to accomplish the task, then work will be done at the rate of 60 foot pounds per minute, and so on.

In order to apply these measurements to automobiles and their performance (whether you're speaking of torque, horsepower, newton meters, watts, or any other terms), you need to address the three variables of force, work and time.

Awhile back, a gentleman by the name of Watt (the same gent who did all that neat stuff with steam engines) made some observations, and concluded that the average horse of the time could lift a 550 pound weight one foot in one second, thereby performing work at the rate of 550 foot pounds per second, or 33,000 foot pounds per minute, for an eight hour shift, more or less. He then published those observations, and stated that 33,000 foot pounds per minute of work was equivalent to the power of one horse, or, one horsepower.

Everybody else said OK. :-)

For purposes of this discussion, we need to measure units of force from rotating objects such as crankshafts, so we'll use terms which define a *twisting* force, such as foot pounds of torque. A foot pound of torque is the twisting force necessary to support a one pound weight on a weightless horizontal bar, one foot from the fulcrum.

Now, it's important to understand that nobody on the planet ever actually measures horsepower from a running engine. What we actually measure (on a dynomometer) is torque, expressed in foot pounds (in the U.S.), and then we *calculate* actual horsepower by converting the twisting force of torque into the work units of horsepower.

Visualize that one pound weight we mentioned, one foot from the fulcrum on its weightless bar. If we rotate that weight for one full revolution against a one pound resistance, we have moved it a total of 6.2832 feet (Pi * a two foot circle), and, incidently, we have done 6.2832 foot pounds of work.

OK. Remember Watt? He said that 33,000 foot pounds of work per minute was equivalent to one horsepower. If we divide the 6.2832 foot pounds of work we've done per revolution of that weight into 33,000 foot pounds, we come up with the fact that one foot pound of torque at 5252 rpm is equal to 33,000 foot pounds per minute of work, and is the equivalent of one horsepower. If we only move that weight at the rate of 2626 rpm, it's the equivalent of 1/2 horsepower (16,500 foot pounds per minute), and so on. Therefore, the following formula applies for calculating horsepower from a torque measurement:

Horsepower = Torque * RPM / 5252

This is not a debatable item. It's the way it's done. Period.


The Case For Torque

Now, what does all this mean in carland?

First of all, from a driver's perspective, torque, to use the vernacular, RULES :-). Any given car, in any given gear, will accelerate at a rate that *exactly* matches its torque curve (allowing for increased air and rolling resistance as speeds climb). Another way of saying this is that a car will accelerate hardest at its torque peak in any given gear, and will not accelerate as hard below that peak, or above it. Torque is the only thing that a driver feels, and horsepower is just sort of an esoteric measurement in that context. 300 foot pounds of torque will accelerate you just as hard at 2000 rpm as it would if you were making that torque at 4000 rpm in the same gear, yet, per the formula, the horsepower would be *double* at 4000 rpm. Therefore, horsepower isn't particularly meaningful from a driver's perspective, and the two numbers only get friendly at 5252 rpm, where horsepower and torque always come out the same.

In contrast to a torque curve (and the matching pushback into your seat), horsepower rises rapidly with rpm, especially when torque values are also climbing. Horsepower will continue to climb, however, until well past the torque peak, and will continue to rise as engine speed climbs, until the torque curve really begins to plummet, faster than engine rpm is rising. However, as I said, horsepower has nothing to do with what a driver *feels*.

You don't believe all this?

Fine. Take your non turbo car (turbo lag muddles the results) to its torque peak in first gear, and punch it. Notice the belt in the back? Now take it to the power peak, and punch it. Notice that the belt in the back is a bit weaker? Fine. Can we go on, now? :-)


The Case For Horsepower

OK. If torque is so all-fired important, why do we care about horsepower?

Because (to quote a friend), "It is better to make torque at high rpm than at low rpm, because you can take advantage of *gearing*.

For an extreme example of this, I'll leave carland for a moment, and describe a waterwheel I got to watch awhile ago. This was a pretty massive wheel (built a couple of hundred years ago), rotating lazily on a shaft which was connected to the works inside a flour mill. Working some things out from what the people in the mill said, I was able to determine that the wheel typically generated about 2600(!) foot pounds of torque. I had clocked its speed, and determined that it was rotating at about 12 rpm. If we hooked that wheel to, say, the drivewheels of a car, that car would go from zero to twelve rpm in a flash, and the waterwheel would hardly notice :-).

On the other hand, twelve rpm of the drivewheels is around one mph for the average car, and, in order to go faster, we'd need to gear it up. To get to 60 mph would require gearing the wheel up enough so that it would be effectively making a little over 43 foot pounds of torque at the output, which is not only a relatively small amount, it's less than what the average car would need in order to actually get to 60. Applying the conversion formula gives us the facts on this. Twelve times twenty six hundred, over five thousand two hundred fifty two gives us:

6 HP.

Oops. Now we see the rest of the story. While it's clearly true that the water wheel can exert a *bunch* of force, its *power* (ability to do work over time) is severely limited.


At The Dragstrip

OK. Back to carland, and some examples of how horsepower makes a major difference in how fast a car can accelerate, in spite of what torque on your backside tells you :-).

A very good example would be to compare the current LT1 Corvette with the last of the L98 Vettes, built in 1991. Figures as follows:

Code: Select all

        Engine          Peak HP @ RPM   Peak Torque @ RPM

        ------          -------------   -----------------

        L98             250 @ 4000      340 @ 3200

        LT1             300 @ 5000      340 @ 3600
The cars are geared identically, and car weights are within a few pounds, so it's a good comparison.

First, each car will push you back in the seat (the fun factor) with the same authority - at least at or near peak torque in each gear. One will tend to *feel* about as fast as the other to the driver, but the LT1 will actually be significantly faster than the L98, even though it won't pull any harder. If we mess about with the formula, we can begin to discover exactly *why* the LT1 is faster. Here's another slice at that formula:

Torque = Horsepower * 5252 / RPM

If we plug some numbers in, we can see that the L98 is making 328 foot pounds of torque at its power peak (250 hp @ 4000), and we can infer that it cannot be making any more than 263 pound feet of torque at 5000 rpm, or it would be making more than 250 hp at that engine speed, and would be so rated. In actuality, the L98 is probably making no more than around 210 pound feet or so at 5000 rpm, and anybody who owns one would shift it at around 46-4700 rpm, because more torque is available at the drive wheels in the next gear at that point.

On the other hand, the LT1 is fairly happy making 315 pound feet at 5000 rpm, and is happy right up to its mid 5s redline.

So, in a drag race, the cars would launch more or less together. The L98 might have a slight advantage due to its peak torque occuring a little earlier in the rev range, but that is debatable, since the LT1 has a wider, flatter curve (again pretty much by definition, looking at the figures). From somewhere in the mid range and up, however, the LT1 would begin to pull away. Where the L98 has to shift to second (and throw away torque multiplication for speed), the LT1 still has around another 1000 rpm to go in first, and thus begins to widen its lead, more and more as the speeds climb. As long as the revs are high, the LT1, by definition, has an advantage.

Another example would be the LT1 against the ZR-1. Same deal, only in reverse. The ZR-1 actually pulls a little harder than the LT1, although its torque advantage is softened somewhat by its extra weight. The real advantage, however, is that the ZR-1 has another 1500 rpm in hand at the point where the LT1 has to shift.

There are numerous examples of this phenomenon. The Integra GS-R, for instance, is faster than the garden variety Integra, not because it pulls particularly harder (it doesn't), but because it pulls *longer*. It doesn't feel particularly faster, but it is.

A final example of this requires your imagination. Figure that we can tweak an LT1 engine so that it still makes peak torque of 340 foot pounds at 3600 rpm, but, instead of the curve dropping off to 315 pound feet at 5000, we extend the torque curve so much that it doesn't fall off to 315 pound feet until 15000 rpm. OK, so we'd need to have virtually all the moving parts made out of unobtanium :-), and some sort of turbocharging on demand that would make enough high-rpm boost to keep the curve from falling, but hey, bear with me.

If you raced a stock LT1 with this car, they would launch together, but, somewhere around the 60 foot point, the stocker would begin to fade, and would have to grab second gear shortly thereafter. Not long after that, you'd see in your mirror that the stocker has grabbed third, and not too long after that, it would get fourth, but you'd wouldn't be able to see that due to the distance between you as you crossed the line, *still in first gear*, and pulling like crazy.

I've got a computer simulation that models an LT1 Vette in a quarter mile pass, and it predicts a 13.38 second ET, at 104.5 mph. That's pretty close (actually a tiny bit conservative) to what a stock LT1 can do at 100% air density at a high traction drag strip, being powershifted. However, our modified car, while belting the driver in the back no harder than the stocker (at peak torque) does an 11.96, at 135.1 mph, all in first gear, of course. It doesn't pull any harder, but it sure as hell pulls longer :-). It's also making *900* hp, at 15,000 rpm.

Of course, folks who are knowledgeable about drag racing are now openly snickering, because they've read the preceeding paragraph, and it occurs to them that any self respecting car that can get to 135 mph in a quarter mile will just naturally be doing this in less than ten seconds. Of course that's true, but I remind these same folks that any self-respecting engine that propels a Vette into the nines is also making a whole bunch more than 340 foot pounds of torque.

That does bring up another point, though. Essentially, a more "real" Corvette running 135 mph in a quarter mile (maybe a mega big block) might be making 700-800 foot pounds of torque, and thus it would pull a whole bunch harder than my paper tiger would. It would need slicks and other modifications in order to turn that torque into forward motion, but it would also get from here to way over there a bunch quicker.

On the other hand, as long as we're making quarter mile passes with fantasy engines, if we put a 10.35:1 final-drive gear (3.45 is stock) in our fantasy LT1, with slicks and other chassis mods, we'd be in the nines just as easily as the big block would, and thus save face :-). The mechanical advantage of such a nonsensical rear gear would allow our combination to pull just as hard as the big block, plus we'd get to do all that gear banging and such that real racers do, and finish in fourth gear, as God intends. :-)

The only modification to the preceeding paragraph would be the polar moments of inertia (flywheel effect) argument brought about by such a stiff rear gear, and that argument is outside of the scope of this already massive document. Another time, maybe, if you can stand it :-).


At The Bonneville Salt Flats

Looking at top speed, horsepower wins again, in the sense that making more torque at high rpm means you can use a stiffer gear for any given car speed, and thus have more effective torque *at the drive wheels*.

Finally, operating at the power peak means you are doing the absolute best you can at any given car speed, measuring torque at the drive wheels. I know I said that acceleration follows the torque curve in any given gear, but if you factor in gearing vs car speed, the power peak is *it*. An example, yet again, of the LT1 Vette will illustrate this. If you take it up to its torque peak (3600 rpm) in a gear, it will generate some level of torque (340 foot pounds times whatever overall gearing) at the drive wheels, which is the best it will do in that gear (meaning, that's where it is pulling hardest in that gear).

However, if you re-gear the car so it is operating at the power peak (5000 rpm) *at the same car speed*, it will deliver more torque to the drive wheels, because you'll need to gear it up by nearly 39% (5000/3600), while engine torque has only dropped by a little over 7% (315/340). You'll net a 29% gain in drive wheel torque at the power peak vs the torque peak, at a given car speed.

Any other rpm (other than the power peak) at a given car speed will net you a lower torque value at the drive wheels. This would be true of any car on the planet, so, theoretical "best" top speed will always occur when a given vehicle is operating at its power peak.


"Modernizing" The 18th Century

OK. For the final-final point (Really. I Promise.), what if we ditched that water wheel, and bolted an LT1 in its place? Now, no LT1 is going to be making over 2600 foot pounds of torque (except possibly for a single, glorious instant, running on nitromethane), but, assuming we needed 12 rpm for an input to the mill, we could run the LT1 at 5000 rpm (where it's making 315 foot pounds of torque), and gear it down to a 12 rpm output. Result? We'd have over *131,000* foot pounds of torque to play with. We could probably twist the whole flour mill around the input shaft, if we needed to :-).


The Only Thing You Really Need to Know

Repeat after me. "It is better to make torque at high rpm than at low rpm, because you can take advantage of *gearing*." :-)
Formula 1, 57, died Thursday, Sept. 13, 2007
Born May 13, 1950, in Silverstone, United Kingdom
Will be held in the hearts of millions forever
Rest In Peace, we will not forget you

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Ciro Pabón
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pRo, I declare myself agnostic. It is not clear as a cool spring in a summer morning :) that, for a rotating object, rpm times the torque equals power?

If an object with the same mass, rotational speed and radius of rotation (i.e. the same torque) rotates twice as fast as another, you have TWICE THE POWER.

Why does it have to have a relation with gearing? Your friend seems a little confused. You can "gear" whatever power you get.

It is not hard to imagine that if you want to stop an object that rotates twice as fast as another you will require twice the work. Or that if an object twice as massive rotates at the same speed and radius as another the same relationsip applies.

Flash animation of a Caterpillar diesel engine (top row) that has the same horsepower of a Corvette engine

You can see that the 1640 lb-ft (oh, how I hate imperial units, they do not allow you to think) at a modest 1.200 rpm of the Cat truck and the 360 lb-ft at 5.600 rpm of the Corvette gives you the same 380 hp. The car has 4.6 times the rpm of the truck and the truck has 4.6 times the torque. In theory (weight of the engine being irrelevant) you could use any engine on any vehicle and get the same acceleration.

There is no relation between an object rotating a 5252 rpm and torque or power. This result is a phallacy subject to the units you choose.

Finally, I declare (heretically, I'd guess) that EVERYTHING in science is debatable. For example, you do not take in account relativistics effects in your calculations... but as a rotating object approaches the speed of light, these relationships begin to show what they are: approximations. Actually, for a "normal engine", let's say, with a flying wheel of, I do not know, 0.5 meter radius for rotational CG, at approximately 47 million RPM you'll get 15% more power than your equations state... :wink:

I'd guess we'll reach these rpms in 2050... :)
Ciro

Gecko
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Ciro Pabón wrote:It is not hard to imagine that if you want to stop an object that rotates twice as fast as another you will require twice the work.
Actually, it takes four times the work.

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pRo
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Ciro Pabón wrote:for a rotating object, rpm times the torque equals power?

If an object with the same mass, rotational speed and radius of rotation (i.e. the same torque) rotates twice as fast as another, you have TWICE THE POWER.
I'm not sure I got your point...?

If rpm * torque = power,

then yes, if another object rotates twice as fast, it has twice the power:

2*rpm * torque = 2*power


(I didn't really get your 2nd comment. How can an object with same rotational speed rotate twice as fast? :?)

Why does it have to have a relation with gearing?
Because in real life, for example cars, you usually have gears. What matters, is the output from the wheels, not the flywheel, after gearing. A car using all 6 or 7 gears is much faster than a car stuck on highest gear.

There is no relation between an object rotating a 5252 rpm and torque or power. This result is a phallacy subject to the units you choose.
I know. Those are just the usual units (in US) when it comes to power and torque in a car.

Finally, I declare (heretically, I'd guess) that EVERYTHING in science is debatable. For example, you do not take in account relativistics effects in your calculations... but as a rotating object approaches the speed of light, these relationships begin to show what they are: approximations. Actually, for a "normal engine", let's say, with a flying wheel of, I do not know, 0.5 meter radius for rotational CG, at approximately 47 million RPM you'll get 15% more power than your equations state... :wink:
I totally agree with that. But I still think the above post is better approximation for cars acceleration than "power matters more than torque". :lol:
Formula 1, 57, died Thursday, Sept. 13, 2007
Born May 13, 1950, in Silverstone, United Kingdom
Will be held in the hearts of millions forever
Rest In Peace, we will not forget you

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Ciro Pabón
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pRo wrote:
Ciro Pabón wrote:for a rotating object, rpm times the torque equals power?

If an object with the same mass, rotational speed and radius of rotation (i.e. the same torque) rotates twice as fast as another, you have TWICE THE POWER.
I'm not sure I got your point...?

If rpm * torque = power,

then yes, if another object rotates twice as fast, it has twice the power:

2*rpm * torque = 2*power


(I didn't really get your 2nd comment. How can an object with same rotational speed rotate twice as fast? :?)
You're right: I made a mess of myself. It should read "If an object with the same mass and radius of rotation (i.e. the same torque) rotates twice as fast as another, you have TWICE THE POWER."
Ciro

slick
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I do love these types of posts.

Power = Torque . Angular Velocity

There are no other options here. This is a hard fact. It can not be broken.

Gearing allows the variation of the two components of Power, torque and angular velocity. So gearing is very impotant, but critically, gearing CAN NOT gear any power you want, because of the physical size mass and more importantly the rotating inertia of the gears themelves.

Torque is the main compoent of any motor vehicle, as it defines the quantity of tractive effort available at the wheels, which is always limited by the capacity of the tyre to transmit that force.

Power is critical to the power plant in describing the rate at which the force can be delivered.

Angular velocity invariable relates to the size of the power transmission (gears) as eluded to in the water wheel desdription.

RH1300S
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Stunner pRo

Thanks 8)

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slimjim8201
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Interesting...but is your name Bruce Augenstein???

http://www.vettenet.org/torquehp.html

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Scuderia_Russ
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It has to be his own work, there are loads of smilies in it. :lol: :roll:
"Whether you think you can or can't, either way you are right."
-Henry Ford-

pyry
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you dont want to anger bruce, he'll plagiarize everything you ever touched
four rings to rule them all

Saribro
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Well, that post (the 1st I mean) feels like incoherent, vague and emperical rambling.
I think I prefered my ignorant bliss over that :p.

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pRo
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It's not my text, it's just a copy from this page as I mentioned in the other thread when this came up. Someone said he can't access the page and I just copied the text here. Sorry about the confusion.

http://www.geocities.com/MotorCity/7177/torquehp.html
Formula 1, 57, died Thursday, Sept. 13, 2007
Born May 13, 1950, in Silverstone, United Kingdom
Will be held in the hearts of millions forever
Rest In Peace, we will not forget you

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mep
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gearing CAN NOT gear any power you want, because of the physical size mass and more importantly the rotating inertia of the gears themelves
It's true what you sayd, it's not possible to gear every torque you whant
but your explanaition is not so good.
I don't know what you mean by physical size mass, but the
problem in gearing a special torque is not primär the rotating inertia.

Lets imagine you whant to place a engine into a F1 car.
You have 2 engines to choose, both have the same amount of horsepower
but one creates the power with high revolutions per minute
and the other with low revs and correspondingly higher tourqe.

Engine1:
revs.: 20 000
power: 800HP (588kW)
torque: M=P/(2 *Pi *(n/60) =280Nm

Engine2 (maybe a strong Diesel)
revs.: 8 000
power: 800 HP (588KW)
torque: M=P/(2 *Pi *(n/60) =701Nm



The problem now is, that you will need at max speed both
max tourqe (because of air resistance) and high rounds per minute
(because of the speed) at the rear wheels.

We whant our car to drive 300Km/h (=83.33m/s).
The force at this speed:
Fw=Cw *0.5 *1.22 *A *V²
Fw= 4727N

Lets say our wheel has a diametre of 0.6m.

Force from the engines.

Fm1= 280/0,3 =933N

Fm2=701/0,3=2337N


Ratio of reduction by the forces:

im1=Fw/Fm1 =5
im2=Fw/Fm2 =2



Revs at the rear wheel.
n=V/(pi *d) =83/(pi *0,6) = 44.2 1/sec
n=2641 1/min

Ratio of reduction by the revs per minute:

i1 =nm1/n = 20 000/2641 =7,5
i2 =nm2/n =3 :idea:


You see there is a difference between the ratio of reduction
calculated after the torque and the speed you whant to drive.
Unluckily is at my example the difference why you can't take
every engine for a F1 car not so clearly visible.
I should choose other figures for the example but at the moment
I don't whant to spend more time for this post.
i hope it's even so understandable.

djones
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Is post number one on this thread 100% correct then or what?

It sounded really good but then looks like people disagree.


One thing I don't agree with myself is this:

"Fine. Take your non turbo car (turbo lag muddles the results) to its torque peak in first gear, and punch it. Notice the belt in the back? Now take it to the power peak, and punch it. Notice that the belt in the back is a bit weaker? Fine. Can we go on, now? "

My peak torque is 4500 and my peak BHP is 6100. If I accelerate in 2nd for example from 4500 you DO NOT get pushed back in your seat as hard as if i did the same from 6000 RPM. Take into account your moving faster at 6000 RPM (more resistance) and it means it's even faster at peak BHP that what it feels.

It's all very confusing :?

djones
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So all these people on here and nobody actually 100% knows what BHP and Torque are??? :shock: