Raptor22 wrote:
What we are saying is that what is measured is torque. That is converted to a power number to use as comparison.
There is a simple reason why torque is measured. The simplest way to measure the power of an engine was to use a brake, and it is very easy to obtain the torque on the brake. The next step is to calculate the angular speed of the the output shaft. That is just measuring the output. That has no relation to how the power is developed int he engine. In otherwords measuring the height of tree doesn't tell you about how the cells multiply in the tree.
When engineers set up a car for the race track they work the gearing to keep the engine within its maximum torque band whilst producing torque at the wheel produce power.
So why do sports cars rev all the way to 8000rpm when the maximum torque band is at 5000rpm?
I have never argued that power is unimportant. In fact the formula P=2piNT/60 shows the relationship clearly.
This only for a rotating shaft (or disk or whatever rotating object). The pistons don't rotate though! so you see something has changed before torque is created.
The point that is being missed is that power on its own tells us nothing about performance. We need torque and at what RPM that T is being generated to determine where best power is produce to convert in speed (v).
Power is everything.. hehe with power you can make any amount of torque you want. The opposite is a fallacy.
Petrol heads become fixated on the power but that does not exist unless the energy (fuel) is converted into mechanical energy (measured as BMEP) that produces torque and RPM.
Power is energy! BMEP is just a way of comparing the performance of piston engines. Just the average pressure above the pistons. Diesels have high BMEP, because diesel fuel has a high calorific value. More energy in the explosion. The drawback is that the explosions can't take place as rapidly as octane.
The only really effective ay to compare engine 1 to engine 2 is to measure its BrakeMEan Effective Pressure (BMEP). Thats translates to T and N which yields P for ease of comparison. But P is always presented at XXXXRPM
One BMEP doesn't translate to overall perfomance though. there are different BMEP's at different rpms. It's just a convenient way to measure engine performance. You have so many other metrics. Specific fuel consumption, indicated power, indcated mean effective pressure, friction mean effective pressure.. brake power..