If you've been around motorized vehicles for any length
of time, you have probably been exposed to the great torque
vs. power debate at some point. If not, it goes like this:
"Torque
is what makes a bike accelerate, not power."
"Wrong."
Torque
and power are inescapably linked by the fact that horsepower
equals torque (in ft-pounds) times RPM divided by 5250,
so people who talk as if they are independent are full of
it. If you have a given torque curve for an engine, you
have the horsepower curve also. Knowing how these two numbers
work with each other lets you can poke through some of the
BS you might read.
First,
as usual, a few definitions.
Torque
is a twisting force applied to an object, like a wheel or
a crankshaft. Note that motion is not required for torque
to exist! If you stand on a lug wrench that is on a frozen
lug bolt, you are applying a torque to that bolt even though
there may be no movement. For our purposes, we will consider
that torque is measured in pounds-force feet (lbf-ft) meaning
the equivalent of a given force, in pounds, acting on the
end of a lever of length in feet. For example, standing
with 180 pounds body weight on a lug wrench one foot long
yields 180 lbf-ft of torque. A child of 90 pounds standing
on a two-foot lug wrench applies the same torque.
Work
is the application of force over a distance. Unfortunately,
the units used are the same (pounds times feet) but we write
this as ft-lb just to distinguish it. The real difference
is that in this case, the "feet" part means feet
of movement. If you push on a car with 100 pounds of force
and maintain that for 30 feet, you have done 3000 ft-lb
of work. An easier example is lifting a weight (in pounds)
a given distance (in feet). If you use some sort of mechanical
advantage, like a winch, you will do the same amount of
work because by halving the effort required, you will have
to double the distance through which you apply the force
to achive the same objective.
Power
is the application of work within a finite time. 550 ft-lb
of work in one second is one horsepower.
So,
let's first go through the numbers to get from torque to
horsepower. Pushing with 87.5 pounds (force) on the end
of our 1-foot lug wrench applies a torque of 87.5 lbf-ft.
No motion yet, so no work and no power. But now let's say
the lug bolt loosens slightly and starts to turn, but that
same 87.5 pounds of force is needed to keep the wrench turning.
For every revolution of the wrench, you are applying 87.5
pounds of force over a distance of (2 * pi * 1 foot) or
6.28 feet, the circumference of the circle that your hand
is making, for a total of 550 ft-lb of work. It's only when
this system is actually moving that work is being performed.
From here, it's a quick step to say that if you work fast
enough to turn that wrench once per second, then you are
doing 550 ft-lb of work per second, which means you are
applying one horsepower.
By
the definitions we can see that HP is directly proportional
to torque and RPM. "Directly proportional" means
there may be a multiplyer involved, so let's find it using
our example numbers, remembering that 1 revolution per second
is 60 RPM:
torque * RPM * constant = hp
87.5 lbf-ft * 60 rev/min * X = 1 hp
X = 1 / (60 * 87.5) = 1/5250
torque * RPM * 1/5250 = hp
hp = (torque * RPM) / 5250
For
internal combustion engines, torque is always given at a
certain RPM because they can't generate any torque when
they aren't moving. Once they are running fast enough to
sustain their own operation, the force that they are exerting
against a load can be measured, and the speed at which they
are turning can be measured, so the torque (and therefore
power) numbers become known.
So,
if there is such a fixed relationship between torque and
power, why do some people say that a certain engine has
lots of power, but no torque? Remember that the connection
between torque and power is rotational speed. A sportbike
motor might generate 150hp at 14,000 RPM but the torque
at that RPM is very small; about 53 ft-lbs. In comparison,
a large-displacement twin might peak at 100 hp at 7000 RPM.
The torque applied at the twin's 7000 rpm, 75 ft-lbs, is
greater than the torque applied at the sport bike's 14,000
rpm but the sport bike makes up for it with a lot more engine
speed and ends up with more horsepower.
The
street, though, complicates things because the sport bike
will probably not be ridden at 14,000 RPM. At 5000 RPM,
the twin would likely have more power. This is an artificial
handicap; the sport bike wasn't meant to be ridden at that
speed since it generates its power by sending the RPM part
of the equation sky-high. For street riding, the twin is
easier to ride, less prone to stalling as you pull away
from a light, and you get that satisfying "oomph"
when you twist the throttle. But as the RPM increases, the
twin runs out of breath and the race bike, although the
torque is low and probably getting lower, continues to make
more and more power until it hits its peak at 14000.
[Insert
dyno charts for comparison showing less torque but more
power for sportbikes at high RPM]
Engines
are designed for their intended use. Our twins are designed
to yield fairly high torque values at low RPM, because this
makes them easy to ride in day-to-day life, and Harley-Davidsons
have their torque concentrated even lower in the RPM range
than BMWs do. Low-end torque is accomplished by several
design traits, one being small valves and intake tubes which
create high air velocity into the cylinder for good fuel
mix at low speed.
Those
effects tend to become a restriction at high RPM, which
means that engines intended for high RPM end up with larger
valves, larger air intakes, smaller cylinders and other
things that let them continue to breathe when other engines
start to gasp. Race bike engines have fairly small displacement,
which limits the torque that can be produced at the crank.
They apply that torque at much higher speeds to get high
horsepower (and who can argue that those bikes don't accelerate
quickly?).
To
a lesser extent, BMW varies these techniques for different
bikes. The GS series has narrower intake tubes to give a
faster intake charge, giving better fuel/air mixing and
better torque at low RPM. Since this becomes a bottleneck
at higher RPM, the "power" engine in the RS and
RT bikes have larger intake tubes. Swapping the GS tubes
into an RS or RT is a common retrofit, as it makes the bike
torquier at low RPM where most of us ride. Newer technology
in cars, like variable valve timing and variable intake
tract length, can give motors the best of both worlds by
increasing torque at higher RPM without giving it up at
low RPM. Incidentally, Honda has variable valve timing on
a motorcycle now.
But
to get back to the main point, it is power that moves our
bikes down the road. Yes, torque provides the pushing force
through the drivetrain, but it needs to happen at some given
speed, and those two factors define "power."
Why
does torque drop after a certain RPM?
Torque
starts to decrease because the engine cannot breathe as
well. Due to the speed, the cylinder does not fill with
air as well. A designer can get around this problem with
"tuned intake" which sets up a resonance to pack
the cylinder with air, but it only happens at a certain
RPM. The next evolution of design is to make a variable
system which packs the cylinders with air at all RPM; this
is usually called "variable tuned intake runners"
or something like that and involves valves which open and
close to create a different size for the airbox and manifold.
Why
does power continue to increase after torque decreases?
Remember
that the power is essentially the product of the RPM and
the torque. At first, decrease in torque is small and is
not enough to offset the increasing RPM, so the overall
product still increases. Eventually the decrease in torque
becomes large enough that it outweighs the increase in RPM
and we see the power start to drop. Because of this, the
power peak will always be after the torque peak.
-Author unknown