GregO
Well-Known Member
Flawed in what way ? That not all horses have the same strength on any given day.KW is more accurate cause horsepower was based on flawed formula 200 years ago.
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Flawed in what way ? That not all horses have the same strength on any given day.KW is more accurate cause horsepower was based on flawed formula 200 years ago.
Horsepower is just a unit of power measurement and is no more or less valid than a watt or any other (just like both a mile and a kilometer are units of distance measurement). How it was originally conceived of doesn't matter.KW is more accurate cause horsepower was based on flawed formula 200 years ago.
Well originally Watt surmised that each horse pushed with a force that Watt estimated at 180 pounds. Whereas with kilowatts it can be precisely measured. But I guess it's whatever the end user wants to go with.Now whether a unit of horsepower really represents a meaningful measure of the power a horse can deliver is a different question.
3kW will get you 4HP.Well originally Watt surmised that each horse pushed with a force that Watt estimated at 180 pounds. Whereas with kilowatts it can be precisely measured. But I guess it's whatever the end user wants to go with.
Apologies for replying to an old thread, but I had the same question and this video provides a crystal clear answer:My dad was part of the "real" mechanic from years ago which could diagnose a car by sound or feel. There are so very few left.
On thing I do remember from him I asked the difference between HP and Torque. Th answer is so simplistic and beautiful. Torque definition is a twisting motion but when it applies to HP and torque. torque means the amount of wortk an engine can do. HP means how quickly it can do it.
I didn't check your math but if it is accurate car a will be going 130Mph and car B will be going 50 Mph at the 1/4 mile mark.Based on these calculations, Car B with 100 hp and 1,000 lb-ft of torque would be significantly faster in a 1/4 mile race, completing the distance in 9.62 seconds. Meanwhile, Car A with 1,000 hp and 100 lb-ft of torque would take 30.0 seconds to cover the same distance.
Pretty sure the math is correctomundo.I didn't check your math
This is the mathematical equivalent of plugging an extension cord into itself.Assumptions:
Car A : 1000 hp / 100 ft-lbs
Car B : 100 hp / 1000 ft-lbs
Both cars weigh 3,000 lbs.
Both cars have identical gearing and tire size.
We'll use the equation for acceleration (a = F/m) to calculate the average acceleration during the 1/4 mile run.
The race starts from a standstill (0 mph).
Time and Speed:
Time = Distance / Speed
Speed = √(2 * Acceleration * Distance)
Car A:
Speed = √(2 * 1.6 ft/s^2 * 1,320 ft) ≈ 44 ft/s
Time = 1,320 ft / 44 ft/s ≈ 30.0 seconds
Car B:
Speed = √(2 * 16 ft/s^2 * 1,320 ft) ≈ 137 ft/s
Time = 1,320 ft / 137 ft/s ≈ 9.62 seconds
Conclusion:
Based on these calculations, Car B with 100 hp and 1,000 lb-ft of torque would be significantly faster in a 1/4 mile race, completing the distance in 9.62 seconds. Meanwhile, Car A with 1,000 hp and 100 lb-ft of torque would take 30.0 seconds to cover the same distance.
In all transparency, the car with 1000 hp and 100 ft-lbs of torque will be faster. Why? Because we can multiply the torque through gearing. The torque curve I'm referencing is net/resultant with the final multiplication accounted for (not the engine torque) so for instance, if you have a car that has a very small displacement and revs to the moon and creates a ton of power but not a lot of torque, you can overcome this with transmission (aka Formula 1) multiplication (and rear end).I didn't check your math but if it is accurate car a will be going 130Mph and car B will be going 50 Mph at the 1/4 mile mark.
Torque is quickness and HP is top speed.
This is why some cars will run 11 seconds at 105 and others will run 11 seconds at 117 Mph