Since Ford F-150 is now last in V8 HP/tq, why don't they make the 6.8L V10 an option?
Maybe if they only have one gear. The big advantage of torque at higher rpm, especially in an acceleration contest, is that you do not have to upshift as early and lose your torque multiplication.
I bookmarked this link a long time ago because it is pretty handy every now and again
http://vettenet.org/torquehp.html
I bookmarked this link a long time ago because it is pretty handy every now and again

http://vettenet.org/torquehp.html
For me, it's all good but this part.
I maintain that the car with 300Tq at 3000 will achieve it's max Tq delivery SOONER than the car that needs to rev to 5000. While the 5000 car is reaching that peak Tq level, the 3000 car will have already been applying max Tq and thereby applying max force to the tires and pavement, and that car will be checking out. (unless you launch the cars at their respective peak Tq revs, which will just result in tire smoke or broken parts...
)
I maintain that the car with 300Tq at 3000 will achieve it's max Tq delivery SOONER than the car that needs to rev to 5000. While the 5000 car is reaching that peak Tq level, the 3000 car will have already been applying max Tq and thereby applying max force to the tires and pavement, and that car will be checking out. (unless you launch the cars at their respective peak Tq revs, which will just result in tire smoke or broken parts...
)the case, then why not make an engine that made 300 lb/ft of torque at 100 rpm, gear it accordingly, and call it a day? Wouldn't that make sense? Less rpm would have a whole host of benefits?
Additionally, the car that made that power down at 3000 rpm would only accelerate faster if you made the other car start at the same low rpm. However, if optimized for the engine, the car with more power (torque * rpm) is going to accelerate faster.
The problem is torque, by itself, is fairly useless in cars. Torque * rpm is much more useful. I'm not making this up - honest! Do a google of Torque vs RPM sometime.

Speaking from the gut, the 3000 car will jump out front by a decent margin early, then as it winds-out (and Tq starts falling) the 5000 car will catch back up and pass ahead of it as they near top speeds (of the engines and cars) respectively.
Remember... acceleration is not linear - much like a Tq or Hp curve is not. They are typically exponential (parabolas). It will go from 0 to some BIG number very fast (within the first second), then it will slowly ramp back down to zero as the car reaches it's terminal velocity. The 3000 car will have a bigger initial number (and hence initial speed) - I guarantee that - and it will also start going back down faster too. The 5000 car will have a smaller initial number (and hence initial speed) yet it will not drop off as quickly as the other car due to the 5000rpm capability, so it will slowly wind-in the other car.
As you said before, the gearing, tire dia, aerodynamics, etc has EVERYTHING to do with which car ends up with better top-end speed, and initial 0-30, 0-60, 0-100 times etc. But if "all things were equal", I'd bet on the 3000 car to lead for the first bit, and bet on the 5000 car to have the better top end.

You know neither of us can "prove" anything when we are speculating on theoretical equalities such as this. It would be neat if we could!
Maybe we need to send this in to "MythBusters" and see what they come up with!
G-man
Maybe we need to send this in to "MythBusters" and see what they come up with!
G-man

Bob
Maybe if they only have one gear. The big advantage of torque at higher rpm, especially in an acceleration contest, is that you do not have to upshift as early and lose your torque multiplication.
I bookmarked this link a long time ago because it is pretty handy every now and again
http://vettenet.org/torquehp.html
I bookmarked this link a long time ago because it is pretty handy every now and again

http://vettenet.org/torquehp.html
Bob
Torque is work - of course it "causes" acceleration. However, 300 lb/ft of torque at 5000 rpm will accelerate a car quicker than 300 lb/ft of torque at 3000 rpm, everything else being equal. I would add that a car that makes its power down low (torque peak at lower rpm) is certainly easier to drive fast than a car that is "high strung". But in the end, the car with more HP (torque * rpm) will go quicker, everything else being equal.
My apparent contridiction...what I was trying to point out is that the 4.6 motor makes its power down low - evidenced by the lower rpm at which its peak torque occurs. IMO, trucks spend much more time at lower rpm, thus the benefit of more power at low rpm.
To illustrate this....lets look at the Ford 5.4 and GM 5.3 numbers I posted earlier. The 5.4 is making 365 lb/ft at 3750 rpm, and thus is making 261 HP at the same rpm. The GM 5.3 makes its peak torque of 338 at 4400 rpm, but lets assume it is also making the same torque at 3750 rpm (and by definition, it has to be making less, but it is a convenient number to use for comparison). Given this assumption then the GM 5.3 is making 241 HP at the same rpm (and actually somewhat less - would have to see the actual torqe at 3750 to be exact). The 5.4 is thus making more power at a lower rpm, making it more useable in a truck, from my perspective.

Finally...and once again....torque and HP are inseperable. HP is a much easier number to work with though. For example...tell me a car makes its peak HP at 6000 rpm, and I can give you a very good idea of where to shift it. Tell me the same car makes its peak torque at 3500 rpm, and I wouldn't have a clue.
Bob
Bob
It would be really cool if it became common to show a full load torque curve for all engines instead of just a peak power and torque number.
Pro Drag racers used to make as much HorsePower as possible and gear accordingly.
The engine at 5,000rpm is doing the work faster, nearly twice as fast, or in less time per revolution, making it easier to move, and has to accelerate faster..."all else being equal"...
The engine at 5,000rpm is doing the work faster, nearly twice as fast, or in less time per revolution, making it easier to move, and has to accelerate faster..."all else being equal"...
Not sure how to read this. At the instant that both cars are making 300 lb ft, they will accelerate at the same rate (with same gearing, weight, traction, etc.). In other words, the car that is making 300 lb ft at 3000 rpm will accelerate as hard at 3000 rpm as the other car accelerates at 5000 rpm. 300 lb ft = 300 lb ft. Simple as that.

Bob
In the real world, don't most cars start from a stoplight at idle? @1000rpms or less?
In case they don't, I put this little disclaimer in my post to cover that concept...
Originally Posted by ProudPony
I maintain that the car with 300Tq at 3000 will achieve it's max Tq delivery SOONER than the car that needs to rev to 5000. While the 5000 car is reaching that peak Tq level, the 3000 car will have already been applying max Tq and thereby applying max force to the tires and pavement, and that car will be checking out. (unless you launch the cars at their respective peak Tq revs, which will just result in tire smoke or broken parts... )
http://www.modernracer.com/tips/torquevspower.html
"For Mr Average, torque is therefore more important than horsepower, unless you spend your life racing around at high revs. "
http://www.carcraft.com/techarticles...wer_vs_torque/
"Engines don’t make horsepower; they convert fuel into torque. Torque is the twisting force imparted to the crank flange and then transmitted to the transmission and the rest of the drivetrain. To some degree torque is the grunt that gets things moving, and horsepower is the force that keeps things moving."
While getting my BSME, I spent 6 months studying automotive powerplants at UNC-Charlotte under Dr. Jerry Hill, an engine designer for Pratt-Whitney. He was on the team that developed the engines for the F14 Tomcats and F-15 Strike Eagles. I triple-minored in Math, Physics, and Computer Science during that first degree too - a result of changing my major from Physics late in my 3rd year (doh!)
I've personally built about 20-24 engines just for my cars alone since 1984, and I've raced everything from 1/8 mile brackets to autocross to full roadcourses. I've picked-up a few things over the years, and I've studied text books... and greasy fingernails... both.
I know you are a smart guy. I don't know your precise educational background, but I know you have your title from a few years back too... I've watched you in the rags and mags... I know you can cut a light, and I know you can gear a car to maximize it's output - you pioneered mod-motor performance for many folks a few years ago, and that was no small feat.
So tell you what... Let's come back to this another time.
We've hijacked this thread bad enough already.
Whaddayasay we agree to disagree, and write about something else for a while - more truck related... to this thread?
To the thread - in MY truck, I'll take a boat-load of Tq pellets over a sack-full of Hp any day. I have my reasons, but that's what I want in MY truck... and in fact I have just that... @580ft-lbs and about 320hp.
NO NO NO!!!
You can't do this!!!
I was writing when you made this post!!!
AAARRRRGGGGGHHHHHHHHH!!!!!
Seriously - I don't think we are really so far apart in basic theory, just in application. It's a thin line and we are not the only ones wavering across it.
to you.
You can't do this!!!
I was writing when you made this post!!!
AAARRRRGGGGGHHHHHHHHH!!!!!
Seriously - I don't think we are really so far apart in basic theory, just in application. It's a thin line and we are not the only ones wavering across it.
to you.
Last edited by ProudPony; Mar 15, 2007 at 08:28 AM.
Ok.
A couple of things....I launch way, way, way above peak torque at the drag strip.
Launching any manual @ 1000 rpm isn't a lot of fun, and most automatics will 'flash' significantly higher than that too.
To put torque to use, you have to do it over time. This is where we get into rpm and thus horsepower.
Car Craft is wrong. Plain and simple.
Bob
A couple of things....I launch way, way, way above peak torque at the drag strip.

Launching any manual @ 1000 rpm isn't a lot of fun, and most automatics will 'flash' significantly higher than that too.
To put torque to use, you have to do it over time. This is where we get into rpm and thus horsepower.
Car Craft is wrong. Plain and simple.

Bob
Nice, what sorta mill is it (if you don't mind me asking) I keep on trying to get my pops to build a 400 using the 170 E-TEC heads from Edelbrock with a nice custom hydraulic roller to take advantage of the cylinder heads at a relatively low rev range.
Yep - on a unloaded 0-60 run with short rear-end gears (like the 3.73s and 4.10s now becoming common), horsepower starts getting damn interesting - and of course horsepower is definitely a factor at highway speeds (assuming that the transmission ratios are well-matched to the power curve and road speed). And although I don't think it's possible to have too much horsepower in a truck (especially when trying to merge onto a busy expressway from a too-short entrance ramp when towing five tons or so), I do start to get nervous when I see people driving their half-ton trucks like they've seen in the commercials. It's a bad feeling seeing someone yanking a big boat down the highway at 75-80 MPH with their new Hemi Ram and knowing damn well that if they get cut-off by another idiot, something bad is likely to happen.
Originall posted by Eric Bryant:
I do start to get nervous when I see people driving their half-ton trucks like they've seen in the commercials. It's a bad feeling seeing someone yanking a big boat down the highway at 75-80 MPH with their new Hemi Ram and knowing damn well that if they get cut-off by another idiot, something bad is likely to happen.
I do start to get nervous when I see people driving their half-ton trucks like they've seen in the commercials. It's a bad feeling seeing someone yanking a big boat down the highway at 75-80 MPH with their new Hemi Ram and knowing damn well that if they get cut-off by another idiot, something bad is likely to happen.
Especially diesels, I see them all the time, hauling Huge Cabin Cruisers around the upper lakes here.
I've personally hauled just over 2 tons of sand in my Silverado 3/4 ton, 2WD, truck bed...talk about a white knucle affair, the front was so light it wondered all over the lane, and I only went 40mph for about 3 miles. But it does show how strong these p/u trucks are.
Oh, the hypocrisy - bitch about unsafe truck driving in one post, brag about violating GVWRs in the next.
torque and horsepower
Alright, here's my 2 cents.
Engines produce torque, they don't produce horsepower. Different levels of torque are produced at different RPMs.
Horsepower is a meaningful translation of torque, dictating what work the engine actually does.
One of the best examples to understand this relationship is a waterwheel. Take two waterwheels. One has "buckets" that of capacity of 5 gallons. Another has "buckets" of capacity of 7 gallons.
Since horsepower is work done by the engine, you can take the two wheels and spin them at the same RPM, let's say 100 RPMs. The 5 gallon wheel will do 5 x 100 = 500 gallons per minute per bucket. The 7 gallon wheel will do 700 gallons per minute per bucket. Now take the 5 gallon wheel and spin it at 140 RPMs. It will now do the same 700 gallons per minute per bucket as the other wheel. If you spin it even higher, it will surpass the 7 gallon wheel.
This is an explanation of torque in relation to horsepower. Horsepower is the total work done by the engine, much like gallons per minute per bucket.
In real engines, of course, the capacity of the buckets vary with RPM (as does torque - it varies with RPM), and to figure out horespower over the entire powerband of the engine is trickier. The bottom line - work done at the end of the day is what matters.
So yes, torque wins races, but more specifically, it's torque at given RPMs that wins races. Which, in turn, translates to horsepower.
And as Bob pointed out, we're talking about torque at the wheels. And vehicle mass.
Engines produce torque, they don't produce horsepower. Different levels of torque are produced at different RPMs.
Horsepower is a meaningful translation of torque, dictating what work the engine actually does.
One of the best examples to understand this relationship is a waterwheel. Take two waterwheels. One has "buckets" that of capacity of 5 gallons. Another has "buckets" of capacity of 7 gallons.
Since horsepower is work done by the engine, you can take the two wheels and spin them at the same RPM, let's say 100 RPMs. The 5 gallon wheel will do 5 x 100 = 500 gallons per minute per bucket. The 7 gallon wheel will do 700 gallons per minute per bucket. Now take the 5 gallon wheel and spin it at 140 RPMs. It will now do the same 700 gallons per minute per bucket as the other wheel. If you spin it even higher, it will surpass the 7 gallon wheel.
This is an explanation of torque in relation to horsepower. Horsepower is the total work done by the engine, much like gallons per minute per bucket.
In real engines, of course, the capacity of the buckets vary with RPM (as does torque - it varies with RPM), and to figure out horespower over the entire powerband of the engine is trickier. The bottom line - work done at the end of the day is what matters.
So yes, torque wins races, but more specifically, it's torque at given RPMs that wins races. Which, in turn, translates to horsepower.
And as Bob pointed out, we're talking about torque at the wheels. And vehicle mass.



), the trucks are often used primarily as cars anyway, so power numbers are becoming pretty important. It's an interesting line for them to walk.