rhagfo wrote:
4x4ord wrote:
Wild Card wrote:
Thats cause the Cummins is most at home at 2100rpm. Peak torque. Everyone gets caught up in the HP craze. Horsepower doesnt do crapola for pullimg grades. Gear it for peak torque and let it pull.
Comments like this are what confuse people. Here is the math:
If you have a 2015 Cummins/Aisin it makes 865 lb ft of peak torque at 1600 rpm. If it is run through gears to slow the rear axle down to 507 rpm (5th gear with a 4.10 rear end) the torque on the rear axle will be 1600/507 x 865 or 2768 lb ft of torque.
Now rev that engine up to 2800 where it makes 385 HP and the torque drops down to 722 lb ft. Drop down to 3rd gear. Your rear axle will be turning 509 rpm. The powertrain will be able to deliver 2800/509 x 722 or 3972 lb ft of torque to the rear axle.
So in 5th it can put 2768 lb ft to the rear axle and in 3rd 3972 lb ft to the rear axle. HP is king ...... if you have HP, torque can be generated with gears.
These numbers assume no power loss through the gears and so are to demonstrate the physics rather than be absolute values.
Yep, that is why high HP gas engines, can't tow what a diesel. More energy per gallon. I will take a Low HP/High torque over a High HP/low torque gasser any day. Diesels don't need to spin fast to move a load.
Here is some facts for you:
Gasoline has more energy per pound than does diesel.
Diesel engines need more air to burn their fuel than do gasoline engines. So when comparing a gasoline engine to a diesel of the same displacement the gasoline engine will make more torque and because it can be designed to rev much higher it will make much more Hp than the diesel.
The designer of the diesel engine (Rudolph Diesel) predicted that due to the slow burning of the fuel, the diesel engine would never be able to maintain operating speeds above 700 rpm. High pressure fuel injection has changed this.
Unlike gasoline engines, Diesel engines have been well suited for turbocharging for decades. The high torque of the diesel stems from turbo charging.
The reletvely recent development in direct injection gasoline engines is allowing gasoline engines to be effectively turbocharged. For instance the Honda 1.5 liter turbocharged gasoline engines make 108 lbft of torque per liter from 1700 rpm all the way to 5500 rpm. The HO Cummins makes 134 lbft of torque per liter at 1700 rpm but by 2800 rpm it is down to the same 108 lbft that the Honda makes. Peak HP of the Honda is 116 HP per liter. The HO Cummins is capable of only 54 HP per liter.
Although Diesel fuel has less energy than gasoline per pound it has more energy per gallon than does gasoline. This and the high compression ratio of the diesel engine contribute to its better fuel economy.
A high HP gasoline engine will beat a lower horsepower diesel up the hill everytime if the gasoline engine has the necessary gears to keep it in its peak hp rpm range.