isnt torque a constant?
at full throttle you make X talks
at half you make 0.5X talks?
isnt torque a constant?
at full throttle you make X talks
at half you make 0.5X talks?
Then I could get a Kb Tshirt, move to Timaru and become a full time crossdressing faggot
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Because there is no point. The more gas you give it, the more torque it puts out. The rpm where your engine puts out max torque should be stated in your owners manual.
Acceleration is not best judged by torque. Horsepower is what you want if you want to accelerate fast. With the right gearing/leverage I can produce more torque with my little finger than a big block V8 can at the crankshaft. The problem is that the torque produced by my little finger is very slow and produces little energy while the big block engine might be spinning at thousands of rpm and thereby putting out a lot of energy/horsepower/kilowatts.
Ride fast or be last.
"I don't like it, and I'm sorry I ever had anything to do with it." -- Erwin Schrodinger talking about quantum mechanics.
large turbine engines can have quite rapid torque fluctuations - from zero to 3800ftlbs in say 3 seconds. the torque meter seems to keep up.
Not really cutting edge technology, been around for a long time in aircratft! It's relatively straight forward when you have an axial shaft (no idea how you'd set it up on your conventional 4 banger) with a power turbine at one end and a load at the other, a reference shaft, measure the degree of twist and you have an instantanious unit to indicate torque. Sweet set up for $3 million dollar engine..it get's very expensive if you get it wrong![]()
So totally agree wth ya, me tacho can do the job for now!
So, apart from the weird KBer random replies telling me that I should be riding a scooter and that I will have a nasty crash because my speed curve is higher than my knowledge curve (WTF? - get over yourselves - the question was about instrumentation readouts), what I am taking from the replies is that some aircraft engines give out this basis already but it would be un-economical to introduce this to automobiles.
This maybe a thing that we see on automobiles of the future though (rather than RPMs as an indication point of when something may occur - to an instrument showing when something actually occurs)?
Also, seems to me that a lot of riders do not fully understand torque at all (not saying that i do though). This thread was intended to answer a late night question I had - seems to have done that, and educated myself and a few other people at the same time.
Thanks for all the replies people - it has been very enlightening.
Haven't read the thread entirely, so someone may have already stated what I'm about to, and that is marketing. Remember when the R6 came out with it's stratospheric rev limit? Which turned out to be BS anyway. But it worked, as many people made the decision to buy one based partly on how high it could rev. Making a bike that rev's slightly higher than the competition or last years models helps sell your product. We all know torque is improved (generally) year to year, same with power. But we want speedo's that go past 300 and rev counters that sweep through massive arcs.
Would be easy and cheap for the OEM to include. Run a bike up on a dyno, get the torque curves for sufficient throttle positions, build a map from that, stick any type of gauge you like on that displays the torque output for the motor at the given TPS/RPM. It's not likely it actually has to measure the torque for what the OP is talking about. Hell even the figure isn't really relevant, it could even just show a percentage of maximum torque. They only need to dyno a sample of production engines to build the 'map', all of those bikes are likely to be within a few percent at any given TPS/RPM.
"A shark on whiskey is mighty risky, but a shark on beer is a beer engineer" - Tad Ghostal
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