TexasRebel
Gearshifter
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2016
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- 27
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- Location
- between the mustard and the mayo
- Vehicle(s)
- 2016 YZ GTPP - PP2
Between the two examples, one can do without a gearbox what the other needs a gearbox to accomplish. A gearbox is weight and friction. If you want the wheels to turn fast, you need RPM. If you want an increase in RPM you need torque.Multiply the torque x2 (which is what gears do) and you get exactly the same output at exactly the same speed in gear with the 10,000 rpm engine verses the 5000 rpm engine. So how do you get performance differences in a drag strip or LeMans (and why are they different?).
PS apparently, Top Fuel motors are limited to around 7900 rpm. Why limit them if low rpm and high torque is faster? Why don't high torque diesels win anything until they get major rules advantages? When they won LeMans, they were allowed more displacement, more boost, AND bigger restrictors. My grandma can win a race with that many advantages.
Top fuel limits engine RPM for safety, not to hinder performance. Energy stored in a rotating assembly increases with the square of rotational velocity (1/2mv^2). Grenade an engine at 10,000 RPM and you have 4X the energy in parts flying as if it was turning 5,000 RPM. You'll find most regulations in any type of racing are for reasons of safety. Heck, you could win every open class drag race if you strap a Titan IV rocket booster on your car... unless surviving is a requirement to win.
The key to understanding horsepower and torque is understanding why a torque curve looks like it does. Bore diameter, fuel burn velocity, rod:stroke ratio, combustion gas expansion time, &c. all factor into it. It's why your idle speed changes if you adjust your timing. It's why you want your timing to change with RPM. It's why the torque curve increases and peaks instead of starting out as high as possible at 0 RPM like an electric motor.
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