โJun-21-2004 09:12 PM
We are getting closer to answers I am looking for etc.
โMar-17-2009 04:24 PM
โMar-17-2009 02:55 PM
โMar-17-2009 01:36 PM
โMar-17-2009 12:37 PM
โMar-17-2009 12:33 PM
โMar-17-2009 11:46 AM
Ace! wrote:
I put the smiley/wink in there because I realize what's true and not in regard to the engines, and I thought the arguments back and forth were as funny as my post, but maybe my post was even a little funnier.
โMar-17-2009 11:43 AM
โMar-17-2009 11:32 AM
Ace! wrote:
And that my friends is why the Ford Triton V10 is better than the competition's diesels ๐
โMar-17-2009 09:16 AM
โMar-17-2009 08:24 AM
dubdub07 wrote:
*********"So we now know that horsepower and torque are basically two different views of the same thing - change one and the other most also change."*********
โMar-17-2009 08:14 AM
โMar-17-2009 08:01 AM
โMar-17-2009 07:54 AM
BertP wrote:
Yes, this is basic stuff. But, your formula HP = T * rpm / 5252 assumes that you have rpm. In our gas and diesel engines, yes you have rpm. My point is that HP also exists in situations where there is no rpm: jet engines, rocket engines, steam engines, horses, us, etc, etc.
Secondly, your assertion that if you chage one of HP or torque then the other must change is not correct. Without reference to rpm, no such claim can be made. If you claimed that, at a given rpm, if you change HP or torque then the other will change then you would be correct. Without that reference to rpm, though, it is impossible to determine what, if any, change is caused in one of those values by a change in the other.
Dynos also do not always measure torque. Chassis dynos, for example, measure HP and calculate torque. Other types of dynos measure other valuse and calculate both HP and torque.
Bert
โMar-17-2009 07:53 AM
โMar-17-2009 07:50 AM