Charting exercises on graphs is of 'academic' interest, but..
..actual experiential torque/thrust - 'seat of pants' visceral feel - is IMO - yet tastier 'proof of the pudding'..
The only thing that your pants can possibly feel is traction force, which has no direct relation to crankshaft torque.J.A.W. wrote:Charting exercises on graphs is of 'academic' interest, but..
..actual experiential torque/thrust - 'seat of pants' visceral feel - is IMO - yet tastier 'proof of the pudding'..
I think you may want sit down and think about that statement a little bit more.Charlatan wrote:The only thing that your pants can possibly feel is traction force, which has no direct relation to crankshaft torque.
That is a good example... Of why you need to be wary of looking at torque without considering the RPM... If you look back at my cycling torque output you'll see I can generate far higher crank torque than that Yamaha, and my combined rider/bike mass is far less, and yet I cannot generate anywhere near the accelerative "seat of the pants" g-forces as that Yamaha!J.A.W. wrote:& yet again here - on a like machine..
.. the application of rising torque simultaneously spins/squeals the back tyre & pops up the front ( see @ ~1:10 in)..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mus_abwLAsk
Ha ha; note your mistake here; the Kawasaki generates that torque at the engine crank... Not at the driven wheel... The wheel speed is actually much less, and the torque at the wheel Much higher as a result of the gearing effect... Hence the seat of the pants force you feel. WHEN A GEARBOX IS INVOLVED YOU MUST PAY ATTENTION TO RPM (or just simply use Power).J.A.W. wrote:& if you actually read the linked data.. machin..
..you'd see that the - Kawasaki - generates maximum rear wheel torque of over 52 ft/lb at ~6000rpm..
..rising from over 40 ft/lb - on above 3,500rpm..
.
Torque is force x distanceJ.A.W. wrote:CB-113, & how is it that you do not read the linked data either?
The rotational "force" working on the shafts, gears & wheels - is in fact the "torque"..
.."Horsepower" being the 4th dimensional aspect of time taken/measured rate of the work thereby done.. ..by the torque..
With gearbox, final drive and wheel-radius to consider, you are better off just thinking Power over Speed equals Traction force.xxChrisxx wrote:I can't --- believe I've been drawn into making a post. I must be a masochist. But...I think you may want sit down and think about that statement a little bit more.Charlatan wrote:The only thing that your pants can possibly feel is traction force, which has no direct relation to crankshaft torque.