Stradivarius wrote:
But I fail to see why you think that maximum pedal position isn't covered by 5.5.5. At any given engine speed, the torque demand will depend on the accelerator pedal position. This dependence has to be monotonically increasing, which means that the maximum accelerator pedal position must correspond to maximum torque demand. This must be the case for each and every engine speed. The fact that the engine torque demand will vary with a change in the engine speed is a totally different matter, which is not affected by either 5.5.3 or 5.5.5.
because the way I see it (which can be wrong of course) 5.5.5. relates on a "rate of change" not on any absolute position.
if the driver at any engine rpm increases the position of the accelerator pedal, the torque demand has to increase as well.
If he does not increase the pedal position (because it is already at max. for example), there does not need to be an increase after he reached a steady (max. in my example) position. The torque demand only need to increase during the transient from one pedal position to the other according the 5.5.5.
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This dependence has to be monotonically increasing, which means that the maximum accelerator pedal position must correspond to maximum torque demand
with apologizes, I don't agree with that statement.
If we take a very simple example and assume for the sake of this argument that 0% throttle pedal position equals 0% torque demand, and that to satisfy the "monotonically increasing" condition in 5.5.5., I chose a rate of 0.5 (in a linear function, which is not required), then I will have a torque demand of 50% for 100% pedal position, which would be perfectly legal. Therefore I fail to see, how you can state that, only based on 5.5.5., 100% pedal position must correspondent with 100% torque demand.