torque vs. bhp.

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Discussion

Mikeylad

Original Poster:

31,608 posts

253 months

Friday 28th March 2003
quotequote all
A little question that has been puzzling me for a while.

I am looking for a neat, layman's definition of the difference between torque and 'power'. I understand how the difference manifests itself in the driving experience, but don't know exactly what it is. I partly remember an analogy involving a wishing-well and differing sizes of bucket and speeds of lift.

Have i made this up? Can anyone even phrase my question for me, let alone answer it? I'm going to go and lie down...

M

deltaf

6,806 posts

253 months

Friday 28th March 2003
quotequote all
Torque is a twisting force.....torque =force x distance.

Power is a measurement of work done in a particular amount of time.
dont think i can make it any simpler than that...

g4ry13

16,959 posts

255 months

Friday 28th March 2003
quotequote all
i may be wrong, i read this in a motoring magazine.

Picture a sprinter. Torque is when the sprinter pushes off the blocks and power is what allows the sprinter to accelerate.

That's what i understand if i'm wrong correct me.

Mikeylad

Original Poster:

31,608 posts

253 months

Friday 28th March 2003
quotequote all
ok, but what then is the technical difference between initially pushing off the blocks, and more generally 'accellerating'?

When does the one become the other?

I'm going back to lie down.

>> Edited by Mikeylad on Friday 28th March 20:06

Boosted LS1

21,183 posts

260 months

Friday 28th March 2003
quotequote all
Well with plenty of torque you can accellerate hard at any rpm just by pushing on the pedal, like in a lazy or big yank V8. That won't happen in a zetec but when the zetec's revving it goes well enough because its got a reasonable amount of bhp where it's got higher revs available. Does this help? Torque can shove you into the seat. I like torque as it's very user friendly in daily driving. Racers will probably like revs and bhp.

Mikeylad

Original Poster:

31,608 posts

253 months

Friday 28th March 2003
quotequote all
i was familiar with that part - the 'real-world effect' part - but am still unable to 'picture' the two. Is it possible to have an engine with measurable torque, but zero bhp, or vice versa?

HarryW

15,150 posts

269 months

Friday 28th March 2003
quotequote all
For straight forward questions I always find this web site to be the best at explaining in an pre O level sort of way ........http://science.howstuffworks.com/fpte3.htm

Works for me.

Harry

GarryM

1,113 posts

283 months

Friday 28th March 2003
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Mikeylad said: Is it possible to have an engine with measurable torque, but zero bhp, or vice versa?


Don't think so as power is a function of torque. IIRC power(bhp) = torque x revs/5250. You can see from this that a high revving engine can produce high bhp without necessarily having high torque. Power gives you speed, torque gives you acceleration. Hope this helps.

Mikeylad

Original Poster:

31,608 posts

253 months

Saturday 29th March 2003
quotequote all

GarryM said:

Mikeylad said: Is it possible to have an engine with measurable torque, but zero bhp, or vice versa?


Don't think so as power is a function of torque. IIRC power(bhp) = torque x revs/5250. You can see from this that a high revving engine can produce high bhp without necessarily having high torque. Power gives you speed, torque gives you acceleration. Hope this helps.


That does help, cheers. Also raises another question though. if power is a direct function of torque, how come engines that produce similar power outputs at similar revs can have widely varying torque figures.

By your formula, wouldn't every car producing, say, 200bhp @ 6000 rpm have identical torque figures?

or am i a simpleton? be honest with me. please.

GarryM

1,113 posts

283 months

Saturday 29th March 2003
quotequote all

Mikeylad said: That does help, cheers. Also raises another question though. if power is a direct function of torque, how come engines that produce similar power outputs at similar revs can have widely varying torque figures.

By your formula, wouldn't every car producing, say, 200bhp @ 6000 rpm have identical torque figures?

or am i a simpleton? be honest with me. please.




At that precise moment, yes. But the peak torque figure may be at a much lower rev point (therefore not the peak power point).

Alan420

5,565 posts

258 months

Saturday 29th March 2003
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Think of it this way, power is the ability of an engine to impart more energy to itself, i.e. spin faster.

Torque is the ability of an engine to turn itself under load.

Using gears both these types of rotation can be converted to something useful.

It situations like these it pays to consider extreme examples.

A remote control car engine is low torque, high power. It spins like buggery.

A coach engine is low power V high torque, it has a <3000rpm limit, but an immense ability to do work.

Torque and power are just different ways of describing how an engine produces its output. The end effect is exactly the same (movement) which is why it's so hard to discern between them.

BTW, I made this up, so I may be utterly wrong. But I am meant to be an engineer.

grahambell

2,718 posts

275 months

Saturday 29th March 2003
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You'll also find this topic covered at:

www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?t=21253&f=66&h=0

daydreamer

1,409 posts

257 months

Saturday 29th March 2003
quotequote all
Covered all over the place. Cars top speed and ability to accelerate is goverend by the torque - but this is torque at the wheels, not at the engine. So to accelerate, use F=ma and for top speed use acclerating force = drag force, again at the wheels as this is where the energy is transferred from the car to the road.

However, an engine will produce more torque at mid revs, than it does at high revs, but because you are getting more bangs at the higher revs, then the power (torque x rotational speed) will be higher.

So, if you can put the engine at in its maximum power band using the gearbox, you will always have more torque at the wheels, which is good!

This is really end of story.

However, if your engine has more torque at lower revs, then it possibly also has adequate power to achieve acceleration without bothering to change gear. All about how you like to drive really.

Don't think that I could have made that any more confusing, so I'll stop now.

Rich

Alan420

5,565 posts

258 months

Saturday 29th March 2003
quotequote all

daydreamer said: Covered all over the place. Cars top speed and ability to accelerate is goverend by the torque - but this is torque at the wheels, not at the engine. So to accelerate, use F=ma and for top speed use acclerating force = drag force, again at the wheels as this is where the energy is transferred from the car to the road.

However, an engine will produce more torque at mid revs, than it does at high revs, but because you are getting more bangs at the higher revs, then the power (torque x rotational speed) will be higher.

So, if you can put the engine at in its maximum power band using the gearbox, you will always have more torque at the wheels, which is good!

This is really end of story.

However, if your engine has more torque at lower revs, then it possibly also has adequate power to achieve acceleration without bothering to change gear. All about how you like to drive really.

Don't think that I could have made that any more confusing, so I'll stop now.

Rich


Aaaargh! My brain!

lx993

12,214 posts

257 months

Saturday 29th March 2003
quotequote all
Or... torque is how big the bang is (i.e. force created by the fuel burning in the cylinders). Power is how many of these bangs you can do (i.e. rpm, as per equation above)

andytk

1,553 posts

266 months

Saturday 29th March 2003
quotequote all

lx993 said: Or... torque is how big the bang is (i.e. force created by the fuel burning in the cylinders). Power is how many of these bangs you can do (i.e. rpm, as per equation above)



yeah, and if you want a really big bang you need to get yourself some nitros......

mikeylad

Original Poster:

31,608 posts

253 months

Saturday 29th March 2003
quotequote all
i think i might have started something i can't control.

am i right to think that all engine with matching power curves must by definition have matching torque curves?

i can't see any room in the formula for deviation. having said that, i can't see much of anything.

daydreamer

1,409 posts

257 months

Saturday 29th March 2003
quotequote all

mikeylad said: i think i might have started something i can't control.

am i right to think that all engine with matching power curves must by definition have matching torque curves?

i can't see any room in the formula for deviation. having said that, i can't see much of anything.
Correct, if the power curves match, then the torque curves also match.

The reason there are pub debates on torque vs power is that the curves don't match. V8 TVR's have bags of torque low down (hence higher power curves in this range too) - I believe that the technical term is grunt - but the torque drops off up the rev range far more than an S2000 engine, which is sold as a high power engine.

Therefore if you don't mind hooning around in the red line area, there is no difference in flexiblity between the two. The bags of torque brigade like to just be able to press the right foot down at 2000 revs to get the car to explode, the high power bunch change gear first.

Mr2Mike

20,143 posts

255 months

Saturday 29th March 2003
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Mikeylad said: Is it possible to have an engine with measurable torque, but zero bhp, or vice versa?


It wouldn't be much of an engine, if it had non zero torque, but zero power, then by definition the engine would be doing 0 RPM

You can produce a torque with no power, but producing power with no torque is not really possible in practice as no bearings are frictionless, and hence require some torque to turn them.

shpub

8,507 posts

272 months

Tuesday 1st April 2003
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All you need to know is

Torque wins prizes, BHP sells cars....

Carol Shelby IIRC