Notices
General Technical
Sponsored by:
Sponsored by: CARiD

TORQUE & BHP?

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old May 15, 2008 | 09:22 AM
  #1  
Morgy's Avatar
Morgy
Thread Starter
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 119
Likes: 0
Default TORQUE & BHP?

As everybody knows more bhp and torque is better but what i'd like to know is whats the difference? Which does what to the cars performance?
Reply
Old May 15, 2008 | 08:37 PM
  #2  
Morgy's Avatar
Morgy
Thread Starter
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 119
Likes: 0
Default

ne1
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 12:23 AM
  #3  
bighead's Avatar
bighead
Scooby Regular
iTrader: (1)
 
Joined: Jun 2002
Posts: 4,033
Likes: 17
Default

high torque is much better than high bhp figures as its the "torque" that gives you the push in the back feeling
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 08:37 AM
  #4  
Henrik's Avatar
Henrik
Scooby Regular
20 Year Member
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
iTrader: (5)
 
Joined: Jun 2003
Posts: 4,154
Likes: 151
From: London
Default

It's different aspects of the same thing, really.

Power (bhp) measures the actual "work" an engine can produce.

Torque is a measurement of a twisting force. The torque combined with the rotational speed gives the power, so they're really both interconnected.

It's power available that can be used to accellerate the car, not torque. However, with higher torque at a given RPM, you'll have more power (bhp) available at that RPM, which is why it's nice to drive a torquey engine
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 09:32 AM
  #5  
Morgy's Avatar
Morgy
Thread Starter
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 119
Likes: 0
Default

From whats been said i assume this:

Torque is how much a motor can pull.

Horsepower is how fast it can do it
.

Is this right?
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 10:21 AM
  #6  
Henrik's Avatar
Henrik
Scooby Regular
20 Year Member
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
iTrader: (5)
 
Joined: Jun 2003
Posts: 4,154
Likes: 151
From: London
Default

Originally Posted by Morgy
From whats been said i assume this:

Torque is how much a motor can pull.

Horsepower is how fast it can do it
.

Is this right?
The horsepower bit is right.

The torque hasn't really got anything to do with how much the motor can pull (apart from the fact that it affects the bhp).

For example, a motorbike which makes say 100bhp at 9000 RPM would exert the same pulling power as a tractor making 100bhp at 500 RPM if both engines were run at those particular RPMs.
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 02:21 PM
  #7  
NorthDownsScooby's Avatar
NorthDownsScooby
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 590
Likes: 0
From: ex 2006 Forester STI in Black, Surrey
Default

Interesting fact: power (bhp) & torque curves always intersect at 5252 rpm.


Any given car, in any given gear, will accelerate at a rate that *exactly* matches its torque curve (allowing for increased air and rolling resistance as speeds climb). Another way of saying this is that a car will accelerate hardest at its torque peak in any given gear, and will not accelerate as hard below that peak, or above it. Torque is the only thing that a driver feels, and horsepower is just sort of an esoteric measurement in that context. 300 foot pounds of torque will accelerate you just as hard at 2000 rpm as it would if you were making that torque at 4000 rpm in the same gear, yet, per the formula, the horsepower would be *double* at 4000 rpm. Therefore, horsepower isn't particularly meaningful from a driver's perspective, and the two numbers only get friendly at 5252 rpm, where horsepower and torque always come out the same.

In contrast to a torque curve (and the matching pushback into your seat), horsepower rises rapidly with rpm, especially when torque values are also climbing. Horsepower will continue to climb, however, until well past the torque peak, and will continue to rise as engine speed climbs, until the torque curve really begins to plummet, faster than engine rpm is rising.
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 02:36 PM
  #8  
WaltonWRX's Avatar
WaltonWRX
Scooby Regular
iTrader: (4)
 
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 876
Likes: 0
Default

Bhp turns heads, Torque turns wheels
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 03:36 PM
  #9  
Mus's Avatar
Mus
Scooby Regular
iTrader: (2)
 
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 2,554
Likes: 0
From: will be back in another scooby in time....
Default

lol
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 03:37 PM
  #10  
Henrik's Avatar
Henrik
Scooby Regular
20 Year Member
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
iTrader: (5)
 
Joined: Jun 2003
Posts: 4,154
Likes: 151
From: London
Default

Originally Posted by NorthDownsScooby
Interesting fact: power (bhp) & torque curves always intersect at 5252 rpm.


Any given car, in any given gear, will accelerate at a rate that *exactly* matches its torque curve (allowing for increased air and rolling resistance as speeds climb). Another way of saying this is that a car will accelerate hardest at its torque peak in any given gear, and will not accelerate as hard below that peak, or above it. Torque is the only thing that a driver feels, and horsepower is just sort of an esoteric measurement in that context. 300 foot pounds of torque will accelerate you just as hard at 2000 rpm as it would if you were making that torque at 4000 rpm in the same gear, yet, per the formula, the horsepower would be *double* at 4000 rpm. Therefore, horsepower isn't particularly meaningful from a driver's perspective, and the two numbers only get friendly at 5252 rpm, where horsepower and torque always come out the same.

In contrast to a torque curve (and the matching pushback into your seat), horsepower rises rapidly with rpm, especially when torque values are also climbing. Horsepower will continue to climb, however, until well past the torque peak, and will continue to rise as engine speed climbs, until the torque curve really begins to plummet, faster than engine rpm is rising.
I'm sorry, but that sounds like it's completely wrong. Otherwise we'd all be ooh'ing and aah'ing about the accelleration of the farmer's tractors or the lorries that pull stuff on the motorway.
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 04:04 PM
  #11  
jayallen's Avatar
jayallen
Scooby Regular
iTrader: (31)
 
Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 7,899
Likes: 0
From: The Fabulist Hunter
Default

BHP sells cars Torque wins races.
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 04:21 PM
  #12  
NorthDownsScooby's Avatar
NorthDownsScooby
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 590
Likes: 0
From: ex 2006 Forester STI in Black, Surrey
Default

Originally Posted by Henrik
I'm sorry, but that sounds like it's completely wrong. Otherwise we'd all be ooh'ing and aah'ing about the accelleration of the farmer's tractors or the lorries that pull stuff on the motorway.
I'm afraid it may sound wrong but that's the physics and the maths of it.

What you are failing to consider is the effect of "gearing" and "power to weight ratios".
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 04:25 PM
  #13  
Henrik's Avatar
Henrik
Scooby Regular
20 Year Member
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
iTrader: (5)
 
Joined: Jun 2003
Posts: 4,154
Likes: 151
From: London
Default

so why is it a formula 1 car is high revving, low torque? Surely, if it's only torque that is relevant it would be better to stick a diesel engine in an f1 car?
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 04:34 PM
  #14  
bighead's Avatar
bighead
Scooby Regular
iTrader: (1)
 
Joined: Jun 2002
Posts: 4,033
Likes: 17
Default

F1 cars make the power in the higher rpm range (same as Jap supersport motorbikes)than a normal road car , and they are rebuilt after every race
now can you do that to a road car !!
for everyday driving its the torque that counts !!
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 04:34 PM
  #15  
NorthDownsScooby's Avatar
NorthDownsScooby
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 590
Likes: 0
From: ex 2006 Forester STI in Black, Surrey
Default

Originally Posted by Henrik
so why is it a formula 1 car is high revving, low torque? Surely, if it's only torque that is relevant it would be better to stick a diesel engine in an f1 car?
F1 cars are a exercise in precise engine design within FIA controlled limits.

I forget what the maximum allowed engine capacity of an F1 car is these days (2.5l..?), but the best way to get 200+mph combined with extreme acceleration is to design the engines to rev high (18,000 rpm). Every car engine designer would be doing this if if we were all prepared to buy £500k cars !!

Diesel engines are not as good for high revving situations.
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 04:40 PM
  #16  
NorthDownsScooby's Avatar
NorthDownsScooby
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 590
Likes: 0
From: ex 2006 Forester STI in Black, Surrey
Default

ps. a "normal" tractor will make about 100bhp @ a low peak of 2,000 revs. This is the gearing effect I mentioned earlier, and is why most tractors don't (can't) go over 25mph on roads.
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 04:43 PM
  #17  
borat52's Avatar
borat52
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Dec 2004
Posts: 985
Likes: 3
From: Gloucestershire
Default

Originally Posted by NorthDownsScooby
Interesting fact: power (bhp) & torque curves always intersect at 5252 rpm.


Any given car, in any given gear, will accelerate at a rate that *exactly* matches its torque curve (allowing for increased air and rolling resistance as speeds climb). Another way of saying this is that a car will accelerate hardest at its torque peak in any given gear, and will not accelerate as hard below that peak, or above it. Torque is the only thing that a driver feels, and horsepower is just sort of an esoteric measurement in that context. 300 foot pounds of torque will accelerate you just as hard at 2000 rpm as it would if you were making that torque at 4000 rpm in the same gear, yet, per the formula, the horsepower would be *double* at 4000 rpm. Therefore, horsepower isn't particularly meaningful from a driver's perspective, and the two numbers only get friendly at 5252 rpm, where horsepower and torque always come out the same.

In contrast to a torque curve (and the matching pushback into your seat), horsepower rises rapidly with rpm, especially when torque values are also climbing. Horsepower will continue to climb, however, until well past the torque peak, and will continue to rise as engine speed climbs, until the torque curve really begins to plummet, faster than engine rpm is rising.
Where did that come from? Its incorrect.
" Another way of saying this is that a car will accelerate hardest at its torque peak in any given gear, and will not accelerate as hard below that peak, or above it."

Thats simply false. The car will accelerate at its greatest rate in any given gear when bhp is at its highest - not torque. In terms of physics you need energy to accelerate anything. Energy is power x time. BHP is a measure of power and hence if you know the energy needed to get a car to 100mph then the higher the bhp (or KW if you prefer metric) the lower the time taken to generate the energy required.

Torque is a component of bhp, so it does have a role in the equation, but an engine producing 1lbft at 1000000000rpm will have 190403bhp and an engine producing 100000lbft at 1rpm would have 19bhp. ie the high torque engine will have very poor aceleration relative to the low torque engine.

Last edited by borat52; May 16, 2008 at 05:02 PM.
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 04:48 PM
  #18  
Keith Collings's Avatar
Keith Collings
Scooby Regular
iTrader: (3)
 
Joined: Mar 2008
Posts: 346
Likes: 0
From: Berkshire
Default

See - Torque - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 04:55 PM
  #19  
Henrik's Avatar
Henrik
Scooby Regular
20 Year Member
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
iTrader: (5)
 
Joined: Jun 2003
Posts: 4,154
Likes: 151
From: London
Default

Originally Posted by borat52
Where did that come from? Its incorrect.
" Another way of saying this is that a car will accelerate hardest at its torque peak in any given gear, and will not accelerate as hard below that peak, or above it."

Thats simply false. The car will accelerate at its greatest rate in any given gear when bhp is at its highest - not torque. In terms of physics you need energy to accelerate anything. Energy is power x time. BHP is a measure of power and hence if you know the energy needed to get a car to 100mph then the higher the bhp (or KW if you prefer metric) the lower the time taken to generate the energy required.

Torque is a component of bhp, so it does have a role in the equation, but an engine producing 1lbft at 1000000000rpm will have 190403bhp then an engine producing 100000lbft at 1rpm, and hence would have 19bhp. ie the high torque engine will not have very poor aceleration relative to the low torque engine.
Thank you

W=mv^2 / 2, and W=P*t,

thus P*t = mv^2/2, or t = (mv^2)/(2P). Thus, to accellerate to a certain v as fast as possible, P has to be as high as possible.
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 06:55 PM
  #20  
rb5_336's Avatar
rb5_336
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Oct 2002
Posts: 955
Likes: 0
From: Sussex
Default

some good articles here Puma Racing Main Menu Page - flow development, engine building, technical and tuning articles

Power and Torque 1- How they are related and the maths that explain them
Power and Torque 2 - Output levels for road and race engines, Volumetric Efficiency and improving engine design
Power and Torque 3 - How they are measured, engine dynamometers and rolling road dynos
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 07:14 PM
  #21  
Mark/WRX's Avatar
Mark/WRX
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 78
Likes: 0
Default

Power sells cars and wins races surprisingly enough.
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 08:44 PM
  #22  
scoobmeister's Avatar
scoobmeister
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 313
Likes: 0
From: Up A Creek Without A Paddle
Default

Originally Posted by Mark/WRX
Power sells cars and wins races surprisingly enough.
Don't think this is strictly true! Whats the point of having a high BHP car that can't put that power on the road, Suspension, Brakes and Tyres are all equally as important,
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 08:50 PM
  #23  
Mark/WRX's Avatar
Mark/WRX
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 78
Likes: 0
Default

I meant in relation to the question and what others have said.
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 09:02 PM
  #24  
petedotuk's Avatar
petedotuk
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 941
Likes: 0
From: Oz
Default

with my last mods i only improved bhp by 15 but my torque by 39lb ft. what a difference the torque makes

Last edited by petedotuk; May 16, 2008 at 09:09 PM.
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 09:11 PM
  #25  
AL99's Avatar
AL99
Scooby Regular
iTrader: (1)
 
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 236
Likes: 0
From: North West
Default

High torque is important, but it depends where in the rev range you have it.

A lot of typically remapped td04 scoobs have 280 lb/ft of torque - but only at approx 3500 rpm. By 6000 rpm it will be much less, probably down to around 200 lb/ft - hence the power drops down as revs rise.

To keep the torque at 280 lb/ft all the way up the rpm range would require constantly increasing boost pressures. probably over 25 psi by 7000 rpm.
But if you could keep 280 lbft at 7000 rpm then you have a very HIGH BHP car.

low torque honda engines rev very high to compensate.

High torque at high rpm is what really counts.
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 09:38 PM
  #26  
Flaps's Avatar
Flaps
Scooby Regular
iTrader: (1)
 
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 2,966
Likes: 0
From: Yorkshire
Default

Originally Posted by Morgy
From whats been said i assume this:

Torque is how much a motor can pull.

Horsepower is how fast it can do it
.

Is this right?
I always thought it was the other way around? Hence the horsepower
Reply
Old May 16, 2008 | 10:06 PM
  #27  
JimmyBFC's Avatar
JimmyBFC
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 1,615
Likes: 0
From: Barnsley
Default

Originally Posted by Morgy
As everybody knows more bhp and torque is better but what i'd like to know is whf torque...? Which does what to the cars performance?

always go for more torque IMO.

Mine and a friends car are both at 320bhp....mine is 300lbs torque his is 360lbs (2.5ltr bottom end)....lets just say theres a vast difference when we have some fun.....ooooh if only I could afford a bottom end...
Reply
Old May 17, 2008 | 11:08 AM
  #28  
Morgy's Avatar
Morgy
Thread Starter
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 119
Likes: 0
Default

Originally Posted by rb5_336
some good articles here Puma Racing Main Menu Page - flow development, engine building, technical and tuning articles

Power and Torque 1- How they are related and the maths that explain them
Power and Torque 2 - Output levels for road and race engines, Volumetric Efficiency and improving engine design
Power and Torque 3 - How they are measured, engine dynamometers and rolling road dynos
Ive just had a look at these articles, you're right they are good. I thought my other half might need to know about torque and bhp so i started to tell her, i thought she might be interested, i mean c'mon who isn't. She isn't, she's told me i need to take her shopping to apologise for being so boring
Reply
Old May 17, 2008 | 12:34 PM
  #29  
Keith Collings's Avatar
Keith Collings
Scooby Regular
iTrader: (3)
 
Joined: Mar 2008
Posts: 346
Likes: 0
From: Berkshire
Default

You have to position it right for her - Torque relates to the amount of shopping carried home and BHP effects the time to get the shopping home - more is better in both cases
Reply
Old May 17, 2008 | 06:54 PM
  #30  
Morgy's Avatar
Morgy
Thread Starter
Scooby Regular
 
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 119
Likes: 0
Default

nice one
Reply
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Abx
Subaru
22
Jan 9, 2016 05:42 PM
InTurbo
Other Marques
20
Oct 8, 2015 08:59 PM
the shreksta
General Technical
27
Oct 2, 2015 03:20 PM
Ganz1983
Subaru
5
Oct 2, 2015 09:22 AM
Scooby_Lee101
General Technical
3
Sep 26, 2015 12:04 AM




All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:04 PM.