โJun-21-2004 09:12 PM
We are getting closer to answers I am looking for etc.
โMar-18-2009 10:49 AM
โMar-18-2009 09:09 AM
โMar-18-2009 08:58 AM
โMar-18-2009 08:54 AM
โMar-18-2009 08:54 AM
โMar-18-2009 08:42 AM
BertP wrote:
Madhatter1 is correct: You need power (HP) to get moving. If you have it, you're gone. If you don't, you're parked. The more you have, the quicker you will disappear over the horizon. The problem comes when we start using words like "easier". What does that mean? Does it mean that a diesel can generate its HP at lower rpm than a gasser? If yes, then a diesl can pull a load "easier" than a gasser. If it means that an engine is useing less of its installed power then the gasser has an easier job of pulling the load (assuming that the gasser has more installed HP than the diesel and that the power losses across the drive train are equal).
No, HP is not the be all and end all. But, torque by itself tells you nothing. If it did, why do you find the power ratings for all of the big engines (ships, trains, etc) give you their HP rating and not their torque rating? Yes, you can find out what the torque rating is, but they are sold by HP because that is what indicates how much work can be done by the engine.
Bert
โMar-18-2009 08:38 AM
โMar-18-2009 07:51 AM
Madhatter1 wrote:
Maybe this will simplify things. My CTD makes a lot more HP at low RPMs than a gas engine does. Lots of HP right off idle. Lots of HP that signs off at 3200? RPMs. Gas engines are just starting to come alive above 2000 RPMs. That is how it pulls my trailer easier. I can get moving quite well at less than 1/2 throttle. It is because the HP is at low RPMs that all the torque is made. You know, the torque that the gas guys for some reason want to say does not matter and that they "make up" for with gearing. Stick the weed wacker engine on there with the right gearing. This thread has turned from a sensible discussion into a "my way is the only way" arguement. Everyone seems to be making up their own facts. I choose Diesel all the way but I have no disrepect if someone pulls up with a bigger trailer than mine towing with gas. I have no idea how often, how far, or where he tows. I also have no idea what he needed to spend or what great deal he may have gotten. He has his own reasons and is capable of pulling the load, just differently than my truck.
โMar-18-2009 07:36 AM
โMar-18-2009 07:11 AM
โMar-18-2009 06:58 AM
โMar-18-2009 06:41 AM
GACamper wrote:
It's no secret that most large commercial trucks and some heavy-duty trucks have diesel engines. Why? Diesel engines generate more torque.
GACamper wrote:
Since a diesel engine doesn't have spark plugs and uses compressed air to ignite fuel, the piston has to travel a longer distance to compress enough air for ignition. This cylinder travel distance is called stroke, and more stroke means more torque.
GACamper wrote:
Look at the differences between two truck engines. A Dodge Ram truck with a 6.7-liter Cummins Turbo Diesel engine has 350 horsepower and 650 pounds-feet of torque. The same truck with a 5.7-liter Hemi gasoline V8 engine, on the other hand, has 383 horsepower and 400 pounds-feet of torque. While the gasoline engine has a little more power, the diesel's torque completely blows it away.
GACamper wrote:
While the two trucks have very similar towing capacities --15,650 pounds for the gasoline engine and 16,350 pounds for the diesel all that low-end power means the diesel engine will have an easier time towing things.
GACamper wrote:
Keep in mind that the Cummins Diesel engine gets that much torque at only 1,500 rpm, which is just above idle. With a diesel engine, you won't have to rev the more up to start towing because the power already exists.
GACamper wrote:
Because you're using more energy-laden diesel fuel, diesel engines get better mileage than gasoline ones, so you'll also be able to tow heavier loads easier and longer without stopping.
GACamper wrote:
At the same time, a truck with a gasoline engine is going to have a cheaper base price. Diesel engines almost always cost more than gas ones because they are built to withstand greater forces from a more potent fuel.
GACamper wrote:
Typically, the bigger the towing job, the larger displacement engine you will need. Towing puts a lot of stress on the engine, so more torque will reduce wear and tear on the vehicle.
GACamper wrote:
All of the evidence points to torque as being more important than horsepower when it comes to towing. Why? The power at low-end rpm provided by high levels of torque lets you move huge loads without much effort.
GACamper wrote:
As stated before, some diesel trucks produce twice as much torque as they do horsepower at near-idle RPM levels -- meaning that they can start pulling something like a Camper, Rv or a boat with ease.
GACamper wrote:
Horsepower is important because it allows a car to move faster on the highway and at high rpm. However, if you can't get that RV off the line, all the horsepower in the world won't help you.
โMar-18-2009 05:56 AM
Hannibal wrote:dubdub07 wrote:Hannibal wrote:
Torque, in our application, is measured on an engine dyno and multiplied by rpm, then devided by the constant 5252. On a chassis dyno, you measure horsepower. There's no way to "measure" flywheel torque on a chassis dyno. To many multiplications in the way. Horsepower is linear, torque is not. Acceleration of the drum against it's electrical resistance is measured and "if" you connect the necessary means of interring engine rpm into the dyno's computer, you'll only get a horsepower at road speed readout, not torque. Torque is the calculated number then using hp/rpm X 5252. It's horsepower. The little pickup truck diesels make it at 30% lower rpm.
The Hemi Screaming? 2000rpm with the diesels is 33revs per second. Hardly loafing along. A Formula One race car turning 19,000 rpm is what I call screaming. My 2500rpm towing cruise is a lot closer to the diesels rpm in comparison. Once again, perception trumps reality to most drivers. My Hemi powered duplicate of my '03 SO Cummins Ram easily out tows the 250hp/460ftlbs Cummins with 100more hp and 100ft/lbs less torque.
Torque is a twisting force, not a leverage force. Two different animals. The axle is an idler on a steam locomotive. The axle does not twist the wheel. The arm pushes the wheel. That's not torque.
You are trying to justify why you tow with a hemi, and of course, you are wrong. I have never owned a motor that "twists", they rotate around and axis, like the arm attached to a piston, whether it gas or diesel or steam.
Justify it? I don't think so. I used "my" money to buy it. The only person I need to make happy with it is "me". And happy I am! So, sorry, you're wrong.
Also, my engine twists it's crankshaft and through the transmission twists the drive shaft and after a 90* ring and pinion turn, twists the axle shaft. The connecting rods in our engines are connected to a shaft which "twists" the output power. The connecting rods of a steam engine connect to the wheels to push the wheels around. There is no twisting force. Torque IS twisting force. To say otherwise is an admission that one doesn't know what torque is.
โMar-18-2009 05:39 AM
dubdub07 wrote:Hannibal wrote:
Torque, in our application, is measured on an engine dyno and multiplied by rpm, then devided by the constant 5252. On a chassis dyno, you measure horsepower. There's no way to "measure" flywheel torque on a chassis dyno. To many multiplications in the way. Horsepower is linear, torque is not. Acceleration of the drum against it's electrical resistance is measured and "if" you connect the necessary means of interring engine rpm into the dyno's computer, you'll only get a horsepower at road speed readout, not torque. Torque is the calculated number then using hp/rpm X 5252. It's horsepower. The little pickup truck diesels make it at 30% lower rpm.
The Hemi Screaming? 2000rpm with the diesels is 33revs per second. Hardly loafing along. A Formula One race car turning 19,000 rpm is what I call screaming. My 2500rpm towing cruise is a lot closer to the diesels rpm in comparison. Once again, perception trumps reality to most drivers. My Hemi powered duplicate of my '03 SO Cummins Ram easily out tows the 250hp/460ftlbs Cummins with 100more hp and 100ft/lbs less torque.
Torque is a twisting force, not a leverage force. Two different animals. The axle is an idler on a steam locomotive. The axle does not twist the wheel. The arm pushes the wheel. That's not torque.
You are trying to justify why you tow with a hemi, and of course, you are wrong. I have never owned a motor that "twists", they rotate around and axis, like the arm attached to a piston, whether it gas or diesel or steam.
โMar-18-2009 05:08 AM
robna wrote:
Ive driven both the old 5.9 ctd and the new 6.7 and have to say I still prefer my hemi I do agree towing with a diesel is better. The diesels are great tow rigs but my hemi does both fine and enjoy leaving you diesels behind me at a light no trailer of course and yes I have beaten the new 6.7 beat him by 4 truck lengths. Happy trails to all!!!