Forum Discussion
rjstractor
Feb 17, 2020Nomad
RoyJ wrote:
If you read his post again, it's flat *power* curve, not torque curve.
A falling torque curve is desirable in a heavy duty motor, because as you lug down the revs in a gear, you get torque rise, thus fairly constant power.
The Cummins loses less power at lower rpm than the Duramax, and thus won't need 10 speeds nearly as much.
Exactly, the motor with the flat power curve maintains horsepower when shifting to the next higher gear, whereas the motor with a flat torque curve loses horsepower with every shift. The extra gear ratios help minimize this.
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