- Thread starter
- Banned
- #1,876
Do you understand that you don’t get the engine torque rating at part throttle? In other words, at constant speed or light acceleration a 3.7 and a 7.3 are producing the same amount of torque. Estimated 450 or 500 ftlb is only the available torque when you floor it.
It’s all about a feeling.
Ok. So ultimately what I’m getting at is this. All you engineers can push your figures, your equations and try to prove things with math. But math and talk about math means nothing without feelings and experiences.
Let’s say you have never been in a car before. All that talk about 0-60 or skid pad numbers, braking distance. With out having felt and experienced it before, it all means nothing - absolutely nothing! You may as well be speaking a foreign language. So the more times we have experiences in different cars, the more we can appreciate and use the mathematics used by engineers.
But human feelings and experiences will always be part of the discussion. I know what fast is. A number does not tell me that. A number does not push me back in the seat. A number does not make the scenery rush past my eyes. A number does not make the air whip by my face when we go fast. Only by knowing what fast is in all its forms can math have any utility.
Therefore, how I feel driving the car matters. That feeling of the torque down low matters. And the facts and figures are a distant second. When I told Norm that math ultimately does not matter I felt sorry for him as being an engineer means math is your life. But the truth is the truth...
Sponsored
Last edited: