I've always thought of it as -
High torque = high acceleration
High HP = high top speed
It is why I claimed in another thread that a big v-twin will usually see to an equivalent capacity IL4 in the twisties.
I've always thought of it as -
High torque = high acceleration
High HP = high top speed
It is why I claimed in another thread that a big v-twin will usually see to an equivalent capacity IL4 in the twisties.
Do you realise how many holes there could be if people would just take the time to take the dirt out of them?
Very, very crudely, and leaving out the technical stuff:
If you want a bike that can go through twisties well (accelerate out of a corner) - get a higher-torque bike.
If you want a bike with a higher top speed in a straight line - get a higher HP bike.
simple?
Edit: beaten to it by MSTRS.
Thats a fucking excellent discription!!! I was about to explain it in air pump terms...
But one thing I would add to you post Matt...is at a point where your maximum torque [maximum buckets of water per minute without spillage??] the torque drops off [water starts to spill]...so efficency drops off...but the higher work rate counters that and you still get the higher work rate [more litres per min]
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The way I see it, Torque will get you out of a tight corner quicker, while horsepower will help you pass someone in a straight line.
People ride torque, and talk horsepower. The bigger and flatter an engine's torque curve is, the easier, and faster it will feel to ride.
The dyno charts attached are for two bikes with similar power, but massively different torque curves, which do you think would keep it's front wheel off the ground more? Which do you think would feel faster?
If you have to shovel a big pile of dirt from A to B, is it better to use a big shovel and chuck a big shovelfull every so often, or a smaller shovel and thow the dirt faster.
Torque is the size of the shovel, horsepower is the size of the pile of dirt. Smaller shovel, you need to shovel faster (more revs). Bigger shovel, you can fling the dirt less often, but it's going to be harder work each time. In the end the pile of dirt is the same size when the foreman comes round, whichever way you do it.
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
They're onto it, unless you're chasing ultimate top speeds concentrate on the torque numbers, and how well spread it is across the rev range.
Hint: 86ft lbs on a 178kg bike makes for great acceleration out of the hole.
This explains it well: http://www.msgroup.org/Tip.aspx?Num=221
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
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