GT Pony
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Also known as horsepower.In short, you need both torque and the rate at which the torque is applied to know anything about performance.
+1 ... true in the basic sense, and that's why HP (along with proper gearing) - not torque - will ultimately determine the performance.Or, you need torque and the associated gearing. I can take that 1/4 HP RC airplane engine and gear it to make 1000 ft-lbs, but it will still accelerate a car like a 1/4 HP engine.
As mentioned along the way in this discussion, the torque (and therefore the HP curve) of certain engines are more suited for specific kinds of use. For instance, cars with lots of low end torque and long big flat torque curves give a near linear HP curve (the 5.0 Coyote is somewhat like that), making them easier to drive and go fast for instance on a very twisty road coarse where the engine might have to go through a large RPM range. Cars like F1 or Indy cars are designed more along the lines of living at redline all day long, and have pretty low torque and very high RPM (and gearing) in order to get the HP needed to perform like they do.
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