
I agree! Looks like it's designed to meet GT300 specs.wesley123 wrote:I hope it does, it looks incredibly cool
I agree! Looks like it's designed to meet GT300 specs.wesley123 wrote:I hope it does, it looks incredibly cool
If every other aspect of the engine were the same, why would the Inline arrangement create more torque? A cylinder doesn't know if its got one buddy infront of it and one behind it, or instead one to the side of it so why would it create more torque in one arrangement compared to the other?Ciro Pabón wrote:An I6 would have more torque, because a V6 .....
The Yamaha YZF-R6 (inline 4 cylinder) revs past 15,000rpm in standard form... so it may be theoretically "worse", but it can still be made to work rather well....Ciro Pabón wrote:Engines bad for revving (naturally unbalanced)
60 and 90 degrees V6
I4
Well it needs to rev high, it is simply to overcome the power deficit they have compared to the diesels. A diesel has way more torque compared to gasoline powered cars. This torque comes in quite handy while accelerating. To overcome this deficit you just need to generate more pwoer out of your gasoline engine, you are just showing up with a knife in a gunfight, the only way you will win it is when the gun fails.machin wrote:The Yamaha YZF-R6 (inline 4 cylinder) revs past 15,000rpm in standard form... so it may be theoretically "worse", but it can still be made to work rather well....Ciro Pabón wrote:Engines bad for revving (naturally unbalanced)
60 and 90 degrees V6
I4
No, they're planning a full-blown works LMP1 car, not just an engine- they've been testing it for over a year:wesley123 wrote:The Toyota already returned this year, being the powerplant in the Rebellion Lola. For next year anyone can get these Toyota engines, if they drive a Lola
I am talking horsepower and Torque here, quite different. The Diesels are just having the advantage of the enormous torque they are having compared to the gasoline cars. If im correct the Engine in the R15 had around 1100Nm torque, compared to a gasloline car that has 500Nm, you wont tell me such an torque advantage wont do anything.machin wrote:People can get in all sorts of a muddle when they use power and torque in the same sentance... One thing I can guarantee is that if the Diesels out accelerate the petrol cars it is for one reason; their average POWER is higher than the petrol engine cars POWER across the rev range they use during that acceleration. The reason? The rules favour the Diesels and allow them to make more POWER. Simple as that.
Yesterday brought a bevy of interesting emails into our inbox. Seems a few of you have been reading our series that is stepping through the methodology of predicting engine power outputs. Now, power is one thing, and as we've been showing, the outputs between the gasoline powered cars and the diesels aren't too dissimilar. At least it seems to be much closer than in years past. So how can the large performance deficit between the two "categories" be explained? Simple, torque. As one of our Industry Experts let's on, "I have done a lot of simulation work for Le Mans...torque is way more relevant than anything else. By a big bunch." Le Mans has what amounts to five long straights; from Tertre Rouge to the first chicane, from the L'Arche Chicane (first chicane) to the La Florandiere Chicane (second chicane), from the La Florandiere Chicane to Mulsanne Corner, from Mulsanne to Indianapolis, and from Arnage to the Porsche Curves. Think of these as five drag strips. What's more important on the drag strip, power or acceleration from torque? So check this out, our Expert tells us a 10% increase in torque can amount to, wait for it...upwards of a 3.7 second decrease in lap time. A similar percentage increase in power only drops lap times at Le Mans by around 2.6 seconds. Furthermore, a 10% increase in downforce is only good for a 1 second drop in lap time. So of course the manufacturers have gone the technical route that leads to the easiest way to decrease lap time. They aren't stupid after all and they have a lot of Boffins running the numbers. Says said Expert, "Two mph faster out of the chicanes is 10-12 mph faster at the end of the straight--even gas turbos can't make up for the 22 to 26:1 compression ratio of a diesel. All that BMEP just shoves the car down the track, out of each corner." And it does that five times with consequences each lap. Stephen Knight, "knighty" on the 10-10ths forum, relevantly relays, "I remember Peter Elleray once said that during the Bentley LMP900 development they actually realized, via many track simulations, that torque was of more importance than power at Le Mans...hence they increased the 3.6 liter Audi engine to 4.0 liters, the net result being slightly less power but a lot more torque, which gave them a significant acceleration advantage, much like the diesels have..."
That's part of the problem; the "experts" fall into the same trap and mix torque and power and get all muddled up as a result. That guy from Mulsanne corner really does make a mess of thing -its no wonder people get confused!wesley123 wrote:I am talking horsepower and Torque here, quite different.
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As one of our Industry Experts ....
Thanks for the explaination. I uderstand that the real power output wouldnt be much different to each other, but what causes the Diesles to be that much faster? sure they are favoured, but that can tbe that much. I still do believe the Diesels have the power advantage and also have the power available sooner, the Peugeot and Audi showed higher trap speeds but were also faster in corners. I think we can say that this cant be all higher df and less drag then the other runners. And certainly not from the Peugeot.machin wrote:Textwesley123 wrote:I am talking horsepower and Torque here, quite different.
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As one of our Industry Experts ....