machin wrote:Why not a small capacity, high reving petrol engine?
Just_a_fan wrote:lots of lovely torque is available for accelerating the thing out of corners.
If engine "A" produces more power than engine "B" then Engine "A" will also be able to produce more torque
at the road wheels (Where it counts) than engine "B", regardless of the flywheel torque of the two engines....
Check out this more detailed explanation of the relationship between power and torque on my website:-
http://www.competition-car-engineering. ... Torque.htm
Using a CVT is the ideal application for a small capacity petrol engine optimised to run over a small rev range.... or even a tiny little gas turbine engine.... lots of power, very low weight, and small volume...
Whilst I take our point that other series with "no rules" tend to follow the petrol route, they don't have fully active aero / suspension.
Whether the car has active aero/suspension or not its always going to be best to have the smallest, lightest possible engine for a given power don't you think? (Or have more power for the same weight/volume). Low weight improves acceleration and small size allows more freedoms for other aspects such as ground effects tunnels, etc.
This is the type of question that can't be adequately answered without asking for more details.
The "rules" for UK sprint and hillclimb (and hence for my car above) are basically;
4 wheels, 1 driver, 40mm ground clearance, 1.8m maximum width. Running on tarmac road (on earth!), must use normal pump fuel, must have rollover protection, a battery kill switch... course length is normally between 1 and 3 miles long and that's about it.....