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  #1  
Old 01-16-2007, 07:35 PM
DavidKim91 DavidKim91 is offline
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dumb question but need help

ok u guys probibly think its really dumb but i dont exactly get torque..
i know it like foot pounds n stuff.. but thats as far as i got..
could someone plz explain this to me .. better.. lol
thanks alot


oh and im just learning bout cars so if u could fill me in on some other stuff or tell me what i can do to learn more that would be awesome.... i know its alot to ask for but worth a try..thx
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Old 01-16-2007, 07:48 PM
GreyGoose006 GreyGoose006 is offline
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Re: dumb question but need help

its pretty simple.

torque is a static measurment of force.
in relation to an engine, it is a measurement of how much work an engine can do.
hosepower is (in engine-speak) torque x rpm

basically, think of it like this.

torque is how much work an engine can do.
horsepower is how quickly it can do that work.
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Old 01-16-2007, 07:50 PM
DavidKim91 DavidKim91 is offline
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Re: dumb question but need help

but what does foot pounds have to do with all of that??
and thx for the reply
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Old 01-16-2007, 08:00 PM
gouldie1903 gouldie1903 is offline
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Re: dumb question but need help

it's the measurement used for rotational force.
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Old 01-16-2007, 08:01 PM
DavidKim91 DavidKim91 is offline
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Re: dumb question but need help

rotational force.... as in the crankshaft?
lol
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Old 01-16-2007, 09:35 PM
GreyGoose006 GreyGoose006 is offline
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Re: dumb question but need help

well foot pounds is a unit of measurment of torque.

it is like this.
if you are tightening a bolt, and you have a 2 foot long wrench and put 50 pounds of force on to the end of the wrench, you are putting 100 foot pounds of torque on the bolt.
same with a 4 foot long wrench and 25 pounds of force.
or a 1 foot long wrench and 100 pounds of force

when measuring torque on an engine, the dyno is measuring the ammount of torque that the engine can produce as the dyno is resisting the rotation of the wheels/crank

the dyno then converts this information to horsepower.
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Old 01-16-2007, 11:54 PM
KiwiBacon KiwiBacon is offline
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Re: dumb question but need help

Torque is a twisting force.

Put a 1lb weight on a lever 1ft long and you get 1 fl-lb of torque at the end of the lever.
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Old 01-18-2007, 01:14 AM
UncleBob UncleBob is offline
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Re: dumb question but need help

Quote:
Originally Posted by GreyGoose006
the dyno then converts this information to horsepower.
*cough* other way around. Dyno measures the drum acceleration at X mph over X time (aka "work" over "time"...with a intertia drum dyno anyway) which is converted to HP then converted to engine torque

In short, torque is a static measurement. It does not involve movement and time. As soon as time and movement is involved, its HP. HP is a dynamic measurement. (ie real-world)
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Old 01-18-2007, 10:12 AM
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Re: dumb question but need help

Torque is not work done. Work done means something has moved. You can apply torque w/out doing any work. It can be simply put as

Torque = Force x Radius

Better off put, Torque is a cross product between the radius and force.
t = F x r. But that touches on vectors and may not be appropriate for this thread.

Quote:
Originally Posted by UncleBob
In short, torque is a static measurement. It does not involve movement and time. As soon as time and movement is involved, its HP. HP is a dynamic measurement. (ie real-world)
Didn't even see that in your post. +1
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Old 01-18-2007, 06:57 PM
KiwiBacon KiwiBacon is offline
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Re: dumb question but need help

Quote:
Originally Posted by 2turboimports
Torque is not work done. Work done means something has moved. You can apply torque w/out doing any work. It can be simply put as

Torque = Force x Radius
To continue along those lines:

Work done (Joules) = Torque (Nm)*Rotation (radians)

Power (watts or joules/second) = Torque(Nm) * Rotating speed (radians per second).
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Old 01-18-2007, 08:16 PM
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Re: dumb question but need help

Quote:
Originally Posted by KiwiBacon
To continue along those lines:

Work done (Joules) = Torque (Nm)*Rotation (radians)

Power (watts or joules/second) = Torque(Nm) * Rotating speed (radians per second).
if this was right it would mean that work is measured in N * m * radians. it's just newton meters, which are equivalent to joules. as well, power is work/time and work is measured in newton meters, time in seconds, this would mean power = Nm/s, not Nm*radians/s.

if you want a vector definition of torque, then it's the cross product of the force and the distance from the point where the torque is applied (and it's r X F, not F X r, i got screwed with that mistake on my exam this year). it's pretty much a measure of a rotational force on a point, with no time or movement involved.

when applying it to cars, it's how much rotational force the engine can apply at a certain rpm. horsepower is how much work the engine can do in a certain ammount of time.

since work (w) equals a force over a distance (F*d) then power is how quickly you can apply that force over that distance. so if you have 100 Watts (N*m/s) you can apply 100 Newtons over 1 meter in 1 second, 50 newtons over 2 meters in 1 second, etc.

hope this clarified things up, i find it more difficult to think of torque relating to cars vs torque relating to wrenches and such (although a wrench system is different from what you think it is, as i learned in mechanics I this year)
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Old 01-18-2007, 08:59 PM
GreyGoose006 GreyGoose006 is offline
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Re: dumb question but need help

well thats why the units are different.

wrench torque is measured with different units than car torque.
one is lbft one is ftlbs... i dont remember which is which, but they are completely different.

BUT...
in both cases, torque is measuring a force that is static and not related to time.
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  #13  
Old 01-18-2007, 09:04 PM
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Re: dumb question but need help

Quote:
Originally Posted by GreyGoose006
wrench torque is measured with different units than car torque.
one is lbft one is ftlbs... i dont remember which is which, but they are completely different.
nope, they're the same.

it's a personal prefrence thing, some people say ft-lbs and some say lb/ft.

still pounds per foot.
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Old 01-18-2007, 09:13 PM
GreyGoose006 GreyGoose006 is offline
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Re: dumb question but need help

right but seeing as how they are so different, it is sort of agreed that wrench torque is meausred with different units than car torque.
at least thats how it is here in the US
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  #15  
Old 01-18-2007, 09:15 PM
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Re: dumb question but need help

never come accross that.

i've also known ft-lbs and lb/ft as the same thing, exactly the same. we get torque wrenches in lb/ft or ft-lbs and they're the same except for whether the manufacturer puts lb/ft or ft-lbs on the gauge.
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