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Not sure quite how to word this question but here goes.

Lets assume that an engine develops 500 Ft/lbs of torque at 3500 RPM. Does this have the same effect on the transmission regardless of the gear?

In other words, we know that the ZF can handle 500 lbs safely, does this change as we shift through the gears? Perhaps a 200 Hp nitrous shot could be used only when the car is in 3rd, 4th or 5th? Or is the gearing irrelevent to the torque pulses generated by the engine at a set RPM?

Thanks
Steve
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Complicated answer.
The engine will produce a certain torque at a certain rpm.
If it produces 500lb-ft of torque. Cleveland would be doing it at around 4,500rpm.
If you could shift precisely in every gear at 4500 rpm, the torque that transmission would be handling would be the the torque the engine was producing (500) multiplied by the gear ratio of the gear you were ingauged in. If it was first gear it would be 2.42. That's what a transmission does. It multiplies torque.
Again if you could do it, one would want to upshift to the next gear, at the precise rpm at which the rpm drop would put the engine back to it's peak torque.
When you hit the engine with nitrous, you are compounding the situation. Yes you are making more horsepower but you are hitting it with an instantaneous loading of torque. Not only that the nitrous may move the torque peak to a different rpm point.
Generally the higher the numerical ratio of the gear (1st gear) the lower the total number of torque the transmission can handle.
Therefore the simplest and probably safest way to use nitrous would be to limit it to the very top of top gear.
With 5 speed transmissions, many drag racers use the gearbox as if it is only a 4 speed. Many are also now using a computer to time the nitrous shot, the amount of the shot, the duration of the shot, and the ignition timing.
Personally, I think it makes little sense to use the nitrous until somewhere over 5000rpm in top gear. For one thing it puts such a load on the transmission that sometimes you can't release the gear you are in and shift.
That probably is a good thing. Transmissions can release a lot of shrapnel when they explode.
I'm sure that you will get different opinions from different people. It depends on how much nitrous you intend to use also. A 75-100hp shot is the safest to use. Once you go over that you are kind'a on your own as to what will break and how baddly it will.
Incidentally most HP transmissions that I see are factory rated for around a maximum of 450lb-ft of torque. I don't think I ever saw a number on the ZF but I know Ford didn't like it for the 427 powered GT40's. That should tell you something right there.(:
Last edited by panteradoug
The Hp/Tq is a concept that makes you play mind games. While TQ is a force, HP is the work done over time. The difference being 400lbs on a shaft doing 100rpm and 400lbs on a shaft doing 1000rpm. Tq the same, HP hugelly different. What is the effect of 400 ft lbs on a shaft that is already spinning 100rpm vs one that is spinning 1000rpm. At 1000 rpm the 400ftlbns is enough "Power" to move the shaft 10x more in the same period of time.

Would that be a fair comparison?

Gary
quote:
Originally posted by gandalfthegray:
Not sure quite how to word this question but here goes.

Lets assume that an engine develops 500 Ft/lbs of torque at 3500 RPM. Does this have the same effect on the transmission regardless of the gear?

In other words, we know that the ZF can handle 500 lbs safely, does this change as we shift through the gears? Perhaps a 200 Hp nitrous shot could be used only when the car is in 3rd, 4th or 5th? Or is the gearing irrelevent to the torque pulses generated by the engine at a set RPM?

Thanks
Steve


Every instance I've seen of torque/HP rating of a transmission (as unexact a science as it may be) is ..Engine.. torque/HP to the input shaft.

A few N2O tips. Limiting the use of N2O to specific (higher) gears is generally a function of traction. If there's limited traction in 1st gear of a car just on motor, adding power isn't going to help push the car down the road faster. In a stockish Pantera, you would probably just need to run a simple throttle position switch on the carb so that N2O is sprayed only at full throttle, and only hit the manual botton once you have traction in upper 2nd gear, using it for the duration of the run. A 200 shot is a big shot of N20 unless your motor is specifically set up for a power adder. Lastly, of all the power adders, nothing has the potential to shock (ie: break) the drivetrain like N20,
> The Hp/Tq is a concept that makes you play mind games.

It's really easy to understand if you understand a couple of things. First
torque is the rotary equivalent of force. For a constant mass, linear
acceleration is proportional to the force applied. This is just the famous
equation F = M * A where mass is the proportionality constant. Similary,
angular acceleration is proportional to the torque applied where the moment
of inertia is the proportionality constant (T = I * W). Second, it is torque
that accelerates a vehicle but it's the torque at the tires, not the
crankshaft, that is important. Third, horsepower, being the rate at which
torque is produced, is the indicator of how much *potential* torque
multiplication is available. In other words, horsepower describes how much
engine rpm can be traded for tire torque.

Many moons ago, I did a write up that derives the relationship between
torque and horsepower and attempts to explains it gruesome detail. The
forum software will probably screw up the formatting but I've included it
below:

Torque Versus Horsepower - More Than You Really Wanted to Know
by Dan Jones

Every so often, in the car magazines, you see a question to the technical
editor that reads something like "Should I build my engine for torque or
horsepower?" While the tech editors often respond with sound advice, they
rarely (never?) take the time to define their terms. This only serves to
perpetuate the torque versus horsepower myth. Torque is no more a low rpm
phenomenon than horsepower is a high rpm phenomenon. Both concepts apply
over the entire rpm range, as any decent dyno sheet will show and as I will
show below.

Before I begin, I will give the short answer to the torque versus horsepower
debate is that torque is what accelerates a vehicle but it is the torque at
the rear wheels that matters and it is the horsepower of the engine that
determines how much engine RPM can potentially be traded for torque at the
rear wheels via gearing. Gearing is the reason you accelerate harder in 1st
gear than you do in 4th or 5th (there's also an aerodynamic drag effect but
that is relative less important for the purposes of this discussion). Please
understand it is the overall gearing provided by the transmission, rear end,
and tire that is important.

To begin, we'll need several boring, but essential, definitions. Work is a
measurement that describes the effect of a force applied on an object over
some distance. If an object is moved one foot by applying a force of one
pound, one foot-pound of work has been performed. Torque is force applied
over a distance (the moment-arm) so as to produce a rotary motion. A one
pound force on a one foot moment-arm produces one foot-pound of torque.
Note that dimensionally (ft-lbs), work and torque are equivalent. Power
measures the rate at which work is performed. Moving a one pound object
over a one foot distance in one second requires one foot-pound per second of
power. One horsepower is arbitrarily defined as 550 foot-pounds per second,
nominally the power output of one horse (e.g. Mr. Ed).

Since, for an engine, horsepower is the rate of producing torque, we can
convert between these two quantities given the engine rate (RPM):

HP = (TQ*2.0*PI*RPM)/33000.0
TQ = (33000.0*HP)/(2.0*PI*RPM)

where:

TQ = torque in ft-lbs
HP = power in horsepower
RPM = engine speed in revolutions per minute
PI = the mathematical constant PI (approximately 3.141592654)
Note: 33000 = conversion factor (550 ft-lbs/sec * 60 sec/min)

In general, the torque and power peaks do not occur simultaneously (i.e.
they occur at different rpm's). However, since the curves are functions
of each other, the curves will always cross at 5252 RPM when the units
are torque in ft-lb and power in US Horsepower. There's nothing magic
about this number and it will have a different value for different units,
say power in Watts and torque in Newton-meters.

To answer the question "Is it horsepower or torque that accelerates an
automobile?", we need to review some basic physics, specifically Newton's
laws of motion. Newton's Second Law of Motion states that the sum of the
external forces acting on a body is equal to the rate of change of momentum
of the body. This can be written in equation form as:

F = d/dt(M*V)

where:

F = sum of all the external forces acting on a body
M = the mass of the body
V = the velocity of the body
d/dt = time derivative

For a constant mass system, this reduces to the more familiar equation:

F = M*A

where:

F = sum of all the external forces acting on a body
M = the mass of the body
A = the resultant acceleration of the body due to the sum of the forces

A simple rearrangement yields:

A = F/M

For an accelerating automobile, the acceleration is equal to the sum of the
external forces, divided by the mass of the car. The external forces
include the motive force applied by the tires against the ground (via Newton's
Third Law of Motion: For every action there is an equal and opposite re-action
and the resistive forces of tire friction (rolling resistance) and air drag
(skin friction and form drag). One interesting fact to observe from this
equation is that a vehicle will continue to accelerate until the sum of the
motive and resistive forces are zero, so the weight of a vehicle has no bearing
whatsoever on its top speed. Assuming level ground, weight is only a factor
in how quickly a vehicle will accelerate to its top speed.

In our case, an automobile engine provides the necessary motive force for
acceleration in the form of rotary torque at the crankshaft. Given the
transmission and final drive ratios, the flywheel torque can be translated
to the axles. Note that not all of the engine torque gets transmitted to the
rear axles. Along the way, some of it gets absorbed (and converted to heat)
by friction, so we need a value for the frictional losses:

ATQ = FWTQ * CEFFGR * TRGR * FDGR - DLOSS

where:

ATQ = axle torque
FWTQ = flywheel (or flexplate) torque
CEFFGR = torque converter effective torque multiplication (=1 for manual)
TRGR = transmission gear ratio (e.g. 3 for a 3:1 ratio)
FDGR = final drive gear ratio
DLOSS = drivetrain torque losses (due to friction in transmission, rear
end, wheel bearings, torque converter slippage, etc.)

During our previous aerodynamics discussion, one of the list members mentioned
that aerodynamic drag is the reason cars accelerate slower as speed increases,
implying that, in a vacuum, a car would continue to rapidly accelerate. This
is only true for vehicles like rockets. Unlike rockets, cars have finite rpm
limits and rely upon gearing to provide torque multiplication so gearing plays
a major role. In first gear, TRGR may have a value of 3.35 but in top gear it
may be only 0.70. By the above formula, we can see this has a big effect on
the axle torque generated. So, even in a vacuum, a car will accelerate slower
as speed increases, because you lose torque multiplication as you shift up
through the gears.

The rotary axle torque is converted to a linear motive force by the tires:

LTF = ATQ / TRADIUS

where:

TRADIUS = tire radius (ft)
ATQ = axle torque (ft-lbs)
LTF = linear tire force (lbs)

What this all boils down to is, as far as maximum automobile acceleration is
concerned, all that really matters is the maximum torque imparted to the
ground by the tires (assuming adequate traction). At first glance, it might
seem that, given two engines of different torque output, the engine that
produces the greater torque will be the engine that provides the greatest
acceleration. This is incorrect and it's also where horsepower figures into
the discussion. Earlier, I noted that the torque and horsepower peaks of an
engine do not necessarily occur simultaneously. Considering only the torque
peak neglects the potential torque multiplication offered by the transmission,
final drive ratio, and tire diameter. It's the torque applied by the tires
to the ground that actually accelerates a car, not the torque generated by the
engine. Horsepower, being the rate at which torque is produced, is an
indicator of how much *potential* torque multiplication is available. In
other words, horsepower describes how much engine rpm can be traded for tire
torque. The word "potential" is important here. If a car is not geared
properly, it will be unable to take full advantage of the engine's horsepower.
Ideally, a continuously variable transmission which holds rpm at an engine's
horsepower peak, would yield the best possible acceleration. Unfortunately,
most cars are forced to live with finitely spaced fixed gearing. Even
assuming fixed transmission ratios, most cars are not equipped with optimal
final drive gearing, because things like durability, noise, and fuel
consumption take precedence to absolute acceleration.

This explains why large displacement, high torque, low horsepower, engines
are better suited to towing heavy loads than smaller displacement engines.
These engines produce large amounts of torque at low rpm and so can pull a
load at a nice, relaxed, low rpm. A 300 hp, 300 ft-lb, 302 cubic inch engine
can out-pull a 220 hp, 375 ft-lb, 460 cubic engine, but only if it is geared
accordingly. Even if it was, you'd have to tow with the engine spinning at
high rpm to realize the potential (tire) torque.

As far as the original question ("Should I build my engine for torque or
horsepower?") goes, it should be rephrased to something like "What rpm
range and gear ratio should I build my car to?". Pick an rpm range that
is consistent with your goals and match your components to this rpm range.

So far I've only mentioned peak values which will provide peak instantaneous
acceleration. Generally, we are concerned about the average acceleration
over some distance. In a drag or road race, the average acceleration between
shifts is most important. This is why gear spacing is important. A peaky
engine (i.e. one that makes its best power over a narrow rpm) needs to be
matched with a gearbox with narrowly spaced ratios to produce its best
acceleration. For instance, some Formula 1 cars (approximately 800 hp from
3 liters, normally aspirated, 18,000+ rpm) use seven speed gearboxes.

Knowing the basic physics outlined above (and realizing that acceleration
can be integrated over time to yield velocity, which can then be integrated
to yield position), it would be relatively easy to write a simulation program
which would output time, speed, and acceleration over a given distance. The
inputs required would include a curve of engine torque (or horsepower)
versus rpm, vehicle weight, transmission gear ratios, final drive ratio, tire
diameter and estimates of rolling resistance and aerodynamic drag. The last
two inputs could be estimated from coast down measurements or taken from
published tests. Optimization loops could be added to minimize elapsed
time, providing optimal shift points, final drive ratio, and/or gear spacing.
Optimal gearing for top speed could be determined. Appropriate delays for
shifts and loss of traction could be added. Parametrics of the effects of
changes in power, drag, weight, gearing ratios, tire diameter, etc. could be
calculated. If you wanted to get fancy, you could take into account the
effects of the rotating and reciprocating inertia (pistons, flywheels,
driveshafts, tires, etc.). Relativistic effects (mass and length variation
as you approach the speed of light) would be easy to account for, as well,
though I don't drive quite that fast.

Later,
Dan Jones

> How does one compare these specs when they are published at such
> disparate rpm's?

Those are just two points on a curve, one is the torque peak, the
other is the horsepower peak. The area under the curve between your
shift points or the magnitude at your cruise RPM is ultimately what
matters but you don't have the full curve so the value of the information
is limited.

As a first order approximation, for a naturally aspirated street engine,
torque follows the engine displacement (for a given compresion ratio).
More cubes equals more torque. Where that torque peak occurs is a
function of the engine tuning. Note that increasing stroke has a
relatively minor effect on horsepower, if all other components of the
engine are left the same. The major effect is to move the horsepower
peak to a lower RPM and increase the torque below that RPM. Of course,
you can trade some of that additional low end torque for horsepower by
the usual tuning tricks (longer duration cam, larger headers, more
induction breathing, etc.)

From the factory, your Buick V6 is tuned for low end torque. It has
a little larger torque peak than the 3.5L, due primarily to the larger
displacement but has less power due to mild cam tuning, limited 2
barrel carb induction and restrictive exhaust. With proper tuning you
can move torque peak up the RPM band which will result in more horsepower.

>Please put this in perspective for me, using this example:
>
>Two almost identical Ford pickups:
>
>1. 300ci six, five spd man---145 hp@3400rpm----265ft-lbs torque @2000 rpm
>2. 302ciV8, five spd man----205 hp@4000rpm----275ft-lbs torque @3000 rpm
>
>Conditions: Both weigh 3500#, both have 3.55 gears, both are pulling a
>5000# boat/trailer. Both are going to the lake north of town via FWY.
>There is a very steep grade on the way. They hit the bottom of the grade
>side by side at 55mph. What will happen and why?

In short, the V8 wins because it has more horsepower to trade for rear wheel
torque, using transmission gear multiplication. What really accelerates a
vehicle is rear wheel torque, which is the product of the engine torque and
the gearing provided by the transmission, rear end, and tires. Horsepower
is simply a measure of how much rear wheel torque you can potentially gain
from gearing.

My previous posting provides all the necessary equations to answer this
question, but we need a few more inputs (tire size, transmission gear
ratios, etc.) and assumptions. I'll fill in the details as we go along.
To do this properly would require a torque (or horsepower) curve versus rpm,
but for illustration purposes, let's just assume the torque curve of the I6
is greater than that of the V8 up to 2500 rpm, after which the V8 takes over.

Using the horsepower and torque equations, we can fill in a few points.

300 I6 302 V8

RPM Tq Hp Tq Hp
--- ------- --------
4000 269 205
3400 224 145
3000 275 157
2000 265 100

where:

TQ = torque in ft-lbs
HP = power in horsepower
RPM = engine speed in revolutions per minute

Assume both trucks have 225/60/15 tires (approximately 25.6 inches in
diameter) and transmission ratios of:

Gear Ratio RPM @ 55 MPH
---- ----- ------------
1st 2.95 7554
2nd 1.52 3892
3rd 1.32 3386
4th 1.00 2560
5th 0.70 1792

I determined engine rpm using:

K1 = 0.03937
K2 = 12.*5280./60.
PI = 3.141592654
TD = (K1*WIDTH*AR*2.+WD)
TC = TD*PI
TRPM = K2*MPH/TC
OGR = FDGR*TRGR
ERPM = OGR*TRPM

where:

K1 = conversion factor (millimeters to inches)
K2 = conversion factor (mph to inches)
WIDTH = tire width in millimeters
AR = fractional tire aspect ratio (e.g. 0.6 for a 60 series tire)
WD = wheel diameter in inches
TC = tire circumference in inches
TD = tire diameter in inches
MPH = vehicle speed in mph for which engine rpm is desired
TRGR = transmission gear ratio (e.g. 3 for a 3:1 ratio)
FDGR = final drive gear ratio
OGR = overall gear ratio (transmission gear ratio * final drive ratio)
TRPM = tire RPM
ERPM = engine RPM

In fifth gear, both trucks are at 1792 rpm (55 mph) as they approach the
hill. Running side-by-side, the drivers then floor their accelerators.
Since the I6 makes greater torque below 2500 rpm, it will begin to pull
ahead. The V8 driver, having read my earlier posting, drops all the way
down to second gear, putting his engine near its 4000 rpm power peak.
Responding, the I6 driver drops to third gear which also puts his engine
near its power peak (3400 rpm). The race has begun.

Since the engines are now in different gears, we must figure in the effects
of the gear ratios to determine which vehicle has the greater rear wheel
torque and thus the greater acceleration. We can determine axle torque
from:

ATQ = FWTQ * CEFFGR * TRGR * FDGR - DLOSS

where:

ATQ = axle torque
FWTQ = flywheel (or flexplate) torque
CEFFGR = torque converter effective torque multiplication (=1 for manual)
TRGR = transmission gear ratio (e.g. 3 for a 3:1 ratio)
FDGR = final drive gear ratio
DLOSS = drivetrain torque losses (due to friction in transmission, rear
end, wheel bearings, torque converter slippage, etc.)

Assuming there are no friction losses, the equation reduces to:

ATQ = FWTQ*TRGR*FDGR

= 269*1.52*3.55 = 1452 ft-lbs for the V8 at 4000 rpm
= 224*1.32*3.55 = 1050 ft-lbs for the I6 at 3400 rpm

Since the V8 now makes considerably more rear axle torque, it will easily
pull away from the I6. Falling behind, the I6 driver might shift down a
gear to take advantage of second gear's greater torque multiplication. He
will still lose the contest because his I6 engine, now operating at close
to 4000 rpm, is making less torque than the V8. If he shifts up to a gear
that places his engine at its maximum torque output, he will lose the
torque multiplication of the lower gear ratio and fall even farther behind.

Note that I picked the gear ratios so both engines can operate near their
respective horsepower peaks at 55 mph by shifting to a lower gear (second
gear for the V8 and third gear for the I6). This was necessary to make the
contest equal. I could have manipulated the gear ratios to favor one engine
or the other, but that would not have been a fair comparison. In any case
where both engines are optimally geared, the V8 will win because it simply
has more horsepower to trade for rear wheel torque.

Q.E.D.
Dan Jones

P.S. Since we know the weights and the tire diameter, we can convert this
rotary torque to a linear tire force and, given the angle of the hill,
compute the linear accelerations of the two trucks using F=MA. This
computation is left as an exercise for the reader.

> Can someone please explain why the h/p and torque lines always intersect each
> other at 5250 rpm. I see that it happens on any combination of parts on any
> engine.

Horsepower is the rate of producing torque, so the two quatities are functions
are directly related to each other:

HP = (TQ*2.0*PI*RPM)/33000.0
TQ = (33000.0*HP)/(2.0*PI*RPM)

where:

TQ = torque in ft-lbs
HP = power in horsepower
RPM = engine speed in revolutions per minute
PI = the mathematical constant PI (approximately 3.141592654)
Note: 33000 = conversion factor (550 ft-lbs/sec * 60 sec/min)

The cross-over point is 5252 RPM but be aware that's only true if you use
torque in units of ft-lbs and power in HP. Use other units such as
Newton-meters for torque and you'll get a different cross-over point.
Dan
I think you were wrong on one of those answers you gave!
Need to go into more detail...
You better check you results again.
After all we on the DTBB are very knowledgeable you can't
pull the wool over our eyes.
By the way I learnt how to put my seat back, now that brains! Big Grin
LOL
> Do you round off pi or calculate it to the last digit?

Heh, heh, heh. When I care, I usually define PI as an equation and let
it be computed to the machine's precision. In Fortran, you can do this with
an double precision arctangent:

PI=DATAN(1.D0)*4.D0

BTW, there's a cool little book by Petr Beckman titled "A History of Pi".
It's a history of mathematicians and the methods they used to approximate
pi form ancient Babylonia to the computer age.

> If calculated to the last digit we're going to be here for a while.. LOL

Indeed. I recently saw a program about a savant who was put to the test
calculating pi. He stopped after many hours and 22,500 digits which were all
checked and found to be correct. It turns out he wasn't calculating the
numbers as much as visualizing them. At around the age of two, he had a brain
siezure that mapped a visual center of the brain to a mathematical center so
now he experiences numbers as images (shapes, textures). For instance, when
he sees a tall building, he sees a nine. What's really interesting about this
guy is that he's a savant but doesn't manifest the usual autism so he's an
excellent test specimen and is able to describe what's going on in his mind.
As a test they took him to Iceland and he was able to learn the language in
7 days well enough to converse fluently.

Pythagoras started a cult that believed numbers, particularly positive
integers, had a mystical significance. To the Pythagoreans, numbers weren't
just abstract constructs but rather entities with a special physical existence
somehow not subject to the uncertainties of perception by the physical senses.
Each square number had a physical counterpart (2 was a woman, for instance).
I find it interesting to see the similarity between the Pythagorean's and the
savant's perception of numbers. I wonder if Pythagoras actually experienced
numbers in a manner similar to the savant. Pi, of course, is an irrational
number and this apperently greatly pained the Pythagoreans. There is an
ancient story that says that the discover of irrational numbers was murdered
by the Pythagoreans for his discovery.

Dan "Pythagoras was a square" Jones
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