The thing I heard, and won't forget is
torque is how hard you pedal your bikes pedals, power is how fast you spin them
Perfect analogy. That's exactly correct, well if you say power is how hard and how fast. As it's both.
The thing I heard, and won't forget is
torque is how hard you pedal your bikes pedals, power is how fast you spin them
NA is more cultured.
I loved racing a turbo car, rolling starts were so easy to make places up lights out and booooooooost. I'm an NA boy though through and through, I think its because of the simplicity and character over what can often feel benign and fake. It's horses for courses.
We all know engines don't win races, chassis's do.
The thing I heard, and won't forget is
torque is how hard you pedal your bikes pedals, power is how fast you spin them
Sorry but you are forgetting the effect of gearing, if you have more BHP its cause your engine can rev higher, so you will be in a lower gear and therefore getting plenty of torque.
What torque does help with is cutting down the number of gear changes required and making it less important if you are in the right gear, so for something like rallying for example its very useful. But even then BHP is still hugely important to acceleration as well.
That is absolutely amazing. Genuinely.
Since the age of 16 (When I started at Rolls Royce) everybody I spoke to has tried to explain torque and power to me. At one stage, I had 2 instructors at college and about 3 classmates all with drawings and diagrams etc etc and I still couldn't grasp it. Up until 30 seconds ago I still couldn't get my head round it!
Thank you. I mean that!!
A Clio 172 and a Civic type are a good example of what's important and how power/torque affects a car.
Clio 165-170 bhp circa 150lbft, Civic 200bhp circa 145bhp
In a lap of a track they're almost identical in standard form (if its not too twisty ) although the Clio gives away power to the Civic and the Civic almost matches the Clio in torque. The Civic only makes its numbers high up the revs where as the Clio's is wider spread.
It just shows that in real life situation that power is nothing without torque and vice versa.
Seriously everytime I sort of get my barings with this, someone turns my head back to gravy! I'm very slowly getting thereSorry but you are forgetting the effect of gearing, if you have more BHP its cause your engine can rev higher, so you will be in a lower gear and therefore getting plenty of torque.
What torque does help with is cutting down the number of gear changes required and making it less important if you are in the right gear, so for something like rallying for example its very useful. But even then BHP is still hugely important to acceleration as well.
The thing I heard, and won't forget is
torque is how hard you pedal your bikes pedals, power is how fast you spin them
I know what I'm trying to say, even lightly tuned Civic's so circa 220bhp & 160lbft are nothing special other than above 120mph.
Fair enough the civic weighs a little bit more than a Clio. Contrary to what you have said they are pithless on anything other than flat road despite how they feel when in or driving one, noise goes a long way to make you 'think' your going fast.
I have raced enough of them up hills even my mates DC5's but that's not what this thread is about.
So torque is the force needed to turn engine drivetrain etc ?
With that in mind wouldnt rolling road figures be a noticeable amount up/down with say a set of 15inch ultraleggeras and say ph2 172 wheels on a 172
But the amount of torque required would be lower so would the engines output not be higher at any given rpm
Iv got myself confused now
Right so basically I know tourqe is to get you going and power is where your going but I don't really get it when looking at car statistics? Like is a car with 140bhp with 235lbs/ft faster than a car that has 190 hp and 170?
whole thing confuses me tbh
BHP is derived from torque, a car with low down torque and a car with high torque with exactly the same BHP will win in different situations. The car low torque will pull away first, but the car with high torque, will catch up. At least, that's what I think it is? Don't take my word for it, I'm usually wrong.
BHP = How fast you can go.
Torque = How fast you get there.
I think that's just about done it for me! Cheers pal!an engine’s output is rated in horsepower and torque. Torque is pulling power, and it’s best demonstrated as the grunt that gets you moving, while horsepower is what keeps you going. Without sounding like your physics teacher, torque is the twisting force created in an engine by rotating parts; horsepower is the measurement of how fast torque is being used. Horsepower and torque work hand-in-hand, as horsepower is calculated from torque.
For the average buyer, torque shouldn’t be a deciding factor unless you know you’ll be towing or hauling heavy loads. And that’s where high-torque vehicles will thrive, driving while towing a trailer . It will be easier to accelerate and sustain speed with a high-torque car in any situation, but especially with heavy loads.
High-performance cars can also produce lots of torque that greatly aid in acceleration. That feeling of your eyeballs being sucked into the back of your head in a fast car during heavy right-foot pounding is an example of excessive torque.