A car a mate's considering buying.
Dyno print seems to contain 'errors' (no reflection on the seller btw)
I spotted 3, any more?
How does a torque vs horsepower graph have five crossing points?
quote:
Originally posted by Slimy38
How does a torque vs horsepower graph have five crossing points?
Put power is the calculated figure, it is a product of rpm and torque measurements. So if the torque and rpm don't dip how does the power?
[Edited on 25/6/16 by jeffw]
quote:
Originally posted by jeffw
Put power is the calculated figure, it is a product of rpm and torque measurements. So if the torque and rpm don't dip how does the power?
[Edited on 25/6/16 by jeffw]
quote:
Originally posted by jelly head
quote:
Originally posted by jeffw
Put power is the calculated figure, it is a product of rpm and torque measurements. So if the torque and rpm don't dip how does the power?
[Edited on 25/6/16 by jeffw]
Yeah and because it's calculated shouldn't the two curves cross at 5252rpm?
quote:
Originally posted by jeffw
Put power is the calculated figure, it is a product of rpm and torque measurements. So if the torque and rpm don't dip how does the power?
[Edited on 25/6/16 by jeffw]
quote:
Originally posted by femster87
quote:
Originally posted by Slimy38
How does a torque vs horsepower graph have five crossing points?
On a different scale
quote:
Originally posted by Slimy38
quote:
Originally posted by femster87
quote:
Originally posted by Slimy38
How does a torque vs horsepower graph have five crossing points?
On a different scale
Nope, on any scale it should still only cross once. If the scales are different then they won't cross at 5252, but it should only ever cross once.
quote:
Originally posted by femster87
quote:
Originally posted by Slimy38
How does a torque vs horsepower graph have five crossing points?
On a different scale
quote:
Originally posted by phelpsa
quote:
Originally posted by jeffw
Put power is the calculated figure, it is a product of rpm and torque measurements. So if the torque and rpm don't dip how does the power?
[Edited on 25/6/16 by jeffw]
Torque is the calculated figure. Dynos measure power.
quote:
Originally posted by MikeRJ
quote:
Originally posted by phelpsa
quote:
Originally posted by jeffw
Put power is the calculated figure, it is a product of rpm and torque measurements. So if the torque and rpm don't dip how does the power?
[Edited on 25/6/16 by jeffw]
Torque is the calculated figure. Dynos measure power.
A chassis dyno measures torque at the wheels, either directly via a brake (water, eddy current etc.) or indirectly on an inertia dyno via the acceleration of the drum.
Torque at the engine is then calculated using transmission loss etc.
[Edited on 25/6/16 by MikeRJ]
Also, it's a std Vauxhall Red Top with ITBs, DTA ECU and an exhaust.
Peaking at over 7200rpm? Surely it'd peak lower than that and struggle to top 180bhp?
quote:
Originally posted by Nickp
Also, it's a std Vauxhall Red Top with ITBs, DTA ECU and an exhaust.
Peaking at over 7200rpm? Surely it'd peak lower than that and struggle to top 180bhp?
sarcastic comment retract to my own inaccuracies lol
[Edited on 25/6/16 by Phil_1471]
quote:
Originally posted by phelpsa
It measures energy at the brake, not torque. The torque is then found by dividing the energy per second (power) by the engine speed.
quote:
Originally posted by Andy D
quote:
Originally posted by Nickp
Also, it's a std Vauxhall Red Top with ITBs, DTA ECU and an exhaust.
Peaking at over 7200rpm? Surely it'd peak lower than that and struggle to top 180bhp?
I reckon it peaked at about 6200rpm, 182bhp?.. the last little kick upwards is a glitch of some sort. I'm sure rolling road operators will know what caused it? Unloading the dyno early or something like that he guessed? ;-)
quote:
Originally posted by phelpsa
quote:
Originally posted by MikeRJ
quote:
Originally posted by phelpsa
quote:
Originally posted by jeffw
Put power is the calculated figure, it is a product of rpm and torque measurements. So if the torque and rpm don't dip how does the power?
[Edited on 25/6/16 by jeffw]
Torque is the calculated figure. Dynos measure power.
A chassis dyno measures torque at the wheels, either directly via a brake (water, eddy current etc.) or indirectly on an inertia dyno via the acceleration of the drum.
Torque at the engine is then calculated using transmission loss etc.
[Edited on 25/6/16 by MikeRJ]
It measures energy at the brake, not torque. The torque is then found by dividing the energy per second (power) by the engine speed.
Yes, torque is the measured figure not power in most dynos.
Power (HP) = (Torque (lb-ft) x RPM)/5250
quote:
Originally posted by MikeRJ
quote:
Originally posted by phelpsa
quote:
Originally posted by MikeRJ
quote:
Originally posted by phelpsa
quote:
Originally posted by jeffw
Put power is the calculated figure, it is a product of rpm and torque measurements. So if the torque and rpm don't dip how does the power?
[Edited on 25/6/16 by jeffw]
Torque is the calculated figure. Dynos measure power.
A chassis dyno measures torque at the wheels, either directly via a brake (water, eddy current etc.) or indirectly on an inertia dyno via the acceleration of the drum.
Torque at the engine is then calculated using transmission loss etc.
[Edited on 25/6/16 by MikeRJ]
It measures energy at the brake, not torque. The torque is then found by dividing the energy per second (power) by the engine speed.
No, it measures torque at the brake, typically using a load cell on a modern dyno.
[Edited on 30/6/16 by MikeRJ]
quote:
Whether it's sensing load at the end of a lever, hydraulic pressure or voltage, as well as speed at the brake, what the dyno is measuring is power. It has no idea how that power is being generated or transfered elsewhere in the system.
quote:
Torque is the calculated figure. Dynos measure power.