
Engine is a standard silver top. Only mods are exhaust and filter.
Can anyone tell me what would cause the power to dip down between 6800 and 7200??
Heres a video of it aswell
http://www.youtube.com/v/yocaM1daZtE
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RomanV wrote:The horsepower is calculated not by engine RPM, or wheel RPM, or anything to do with the car....
It's the RPM of the rollers, and the amount of torque applied to the rollers that they print out... It's the only real way to do it. For example, you could go for a sprint on the rollers, and see what sort of HP you put out... (less than one, unless you're really harcore though!)
strx7 wrote:They know what RPM the engine is doing, that have a POWER figure be it KW or HP for that given engine RPM therefore a Torque curve can be printed.
afterall
HP = (rpm x torque (lbft)) / 5252
strx7 wrote:the readings along the top of the graph look like engine RPM to me........
strx7 wrote:the readings along the top of the graph look like engine RPM to me........
Hi Robin,
I have a few questions regarding your dyno setup.
I'm trying to make some sense of my dyno plot, but I'm not sure how to
work the numbers back into something that makes sense to me.
How do you actually work out the HP rating, when you dont know the
wheel speed, or engine RPM?
Seeing as how the HP formula is:
HP = torque x rpm / 5252,
I cant say I know how you work out how much HP a car is making,
without knowing the rotational speed of either the wheels or engine RPM.
I know how to work the road speed back to engine RPM, so it doesnt
matter too much, but your initial numbers dont seem to make sense to me.
If you were to use the rotational speed of the wheels, you'd have to
know the rolling circumference, if you were to use engine RPM, you'd
obviously need to know what RPM the engine is doing.
the only other way I can think of that you could do it, is that you
use the RPM of the rollers, which have a fixed circumference which you
know, and use it in the formula with the torque applied to the rollers too.
This makes sense, but I cant help but wonder how it would differ, if
compared to using the engine RPM, and dividing the wheel torque
figures by the reduction ratio of the wheel size and gearbox/final drive ratios?
Thanks for your time.
Regards,
David
Hi Dave
In simple terms ALL chassis dynos must use the rpm of the roller x Torque applied to the load cell ,plus rotational inertia to make HP.
The torque numbers will differ with different dia roller ,but conversly the rpm will drop as well equalling the same power.
On the dyno plot you have from us it will show "wheel torque and wheel power"
The torque could technically be called tractive effort.
The shape however is correct.
Hope this helps
Robin
strx7 wrote:so in other words the dyno graph is a load of crap too................
Due to how HP is calculated you either have to say A) the power curve and torque curve are accurate, or B) they are of no use what so ever
ya cant say that is the power, but we dont know the torque.
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