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sergei wrote:Realistically 50Hp is already a lot of heat.
for example 50kW induction furnace is capable of melting ~ 10kg of steel.
strx7 wrote:sergei wrote:Realistically 50Hp is already a lot of heat.
for example 50kW induction furnace is capable of melting ~ 10kg of steel.
but you are thinking about it the wrong way. the wheel HP readings aren't loosing X HP thru the drivetrain, they are merely reading a HP difference. Unless you hook an engine dyno up to the wheels, no one can truely say how much power is truely being LOST in the drivetrain.
RedMist wrote:You never loose energy. You simply convert it. In this case to either sound or heat. As the drivetrain doesn't make a hell of a racket then a clear majority is converted to heat.
strx7 wrote:but you are thinking about it the wrong way. the wheel HP readings aren't loosing X HP thru the drivetrain, they are merely reading a HP difference. Unless you hook an engine dyno up to the wheels, no one can truely say how much power is truely being LOST in the drivetrain.
strx7 wrote:flywheel HP is the only TRUE HP, because all types of hub and wheel dynos read different!!!!!! why cant people comprehend that.
Al wrote:Time to move to pomgolia mate.
They love BHP there with their coast down chassis dynos runs.
The B stands for bullshit.
strx7 wrote:
many years ago a vehicle was run on dynojet, dyno dynamics and dynopak dynos as an auto. the owner then converted it to manul, and ran all 3 dynos again. before the engine was put in the car it was also run on an engine dyno. the results were....
Dyno Pak manual read 9% less than flywheel
Dynopak Auto read 11% less than flywheel
Dynojet Manual read 15% less than flywheel
Dynojet Auto read 17% than flywheel
Dyno Dynamics Manual read 27% less than flywheel
Dyno Dnamics Auto read 29% Less than flywheel.
Malcolm wrote: You do realise that they're fundamentally the same apparatus, but one is configured to mate to an engine while the other has rollers which allow a car's wheels to drive its input?
saft wrote:RedMist wrote:You never loose energy. You simply convert it. In this case to either sound or heat. As the drivetrain doesn't make a hell of a racket then a clear majority is converted to heat.
only in a situation where the measurement is taken with slow or no acceleration of the drivetrain
saft wrote:its not lost, its simply going into accelerating the drivetrain
and therefore cant be measured at the wheels, but isnt being turned into heat or noise
saft wrote:its not lost, its simply going into accelerating the drivetrain
and therefore cant be measured at the wheels, but isnt being turned into heat or noise
fivebob wrote:saft wrote:its not lost, its simply going into accelerating the drivetrain
Care to explain where the "lost" energy goes, because that explanation is BSand therefore cant be measured at the wheels, but isnt being turned into heat or noise
Conservation of energy says it is being turned into other forms of energy, heat, noise etc.
saft wrote:its being conserved but not measured in the drivetrain
its still rotating at the end of the measured run.
at a faster ramp rate more energy is used (as a percentage of what was produced overall) in accelerating the driveline.
most dynos we run over here dont do the wind down measurement.
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