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RomanV wrote:Torque – The measure of the force applied to a member to produce rotational motion usually measured in foot-pounds. Torque is determined by multiplying the applied force by the distance from the pivot point to the point where the force is applied.
I already knew this, even before the start of this thread.
That wasnt the nature of the question.
Perhaps I need to clarify myself.
As an example.
A single cylinder 4 stroke engine is spinning at 2000rpm.
A split second before combustion is to occur, how much torque is this engine producing, at this specific point in time?
And how much torque is it producing, at the instant point in time, just after combustion?
Are these two numbers different? yes.
If these two numbers are different, how can you say that the engine is producing xxx amount of torque at 2000rpm?
If you have a 10 cylinder engine that only fires one cylinder at a time, (and you take a measurement of torque at one instant in time) how can all 10 cylinders affect the torque output?
I suppose I could have restated my question as:
How is torque measured, when it isnt applied as a constant force?
sergei wrote:Also there is the flywheel which by rotational inertia applies torque between the power strokes.
sergei wrote:Well to say it bluntly they take value before and after and divide by 2 to get an average.
Say you apply 10 Nm for 10s then 20Nm for another 10s,here is the equation to get Torque out ofthat:
(10Nm * 10s + 20Nm * 10s) / ( 20s) = 15 Nm ! no time componet in result (20s is total time when torque was measured)
vvega wrote:1998 wrote:
A seat sitting on a floor will create bending moments across the surface. These can be represented as torques.
oh and FYI im second year mechanical BE
good for you
but flasshing a dgree your not even half way though does not impress me whatsoever
like i said this is 5th form stuff
ill put it simple
if its not a rotational movement it CANNOT be represented as torque
if you wish to argue that the please give me a book title and referance that will back up this
think of it as a paper where you have to give referance for all facts
been at uni and in your 2nd year you will be no stranger to this
http://www.ac.wwu.edu/~vawter/PhysicsNet/Topics/RotationalDynamics/DefinitionOfTorque.html
there is my referance
ill give you a online one because you wont have the books i have till you get to your 4th year
v
RomanV wrote:Vvega, do you have an answer relating to the example above?
vvega wrote:if its not a rotational movement it CANNOT be represented as torque
vvega wrote:you dont have to have movement to have a rotational force
v
vvega wrote:there are devises that can do that measurement but the sampling rate has rt o be increadbly high
this makes the device very expensive
it wouls have to sample at least 16 times per second just to give 2 referance points and even then it woudl just be a interpolation of data so hardly acurate as to give you the pulse waveform
vvega wrote:in your example then your talking about adding a time factor
to work it out you would have to use strokes as your datum and work form there
say at 1 rpm you motor produced 30 hp
so we use this forumlar
(HP x 5252) divided by RPM =
30x 5252 / 1 =157560 FTpds
remeber a 4 stroke only provides 1 force stroke the rest is inertia
v
RomanV wrote:sergei wrote:Well to say it bluntly they take value before and after and divide by 2 to get an average.
Say you apply 10 Nm for 10s then 20Nm for another 10s,here is the equation to get Torque out ofthat:
(10Nm * 10s + 20Nm * 10s) / ( 20s) = 15 Nm ! no time componet in result (20s is total time when torque was measured)
can 10nm over 10 seconds be shown as horsepower?
can 20nm over 10 seconds be shown as horsepower?
How is there no 'time' element to torque again? (in the context of the above discussion)
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