minor point .....
should be 460 bar differential (with the compression as given above) ?
so a pressure reduction of 7.35% and a flow rate reduction of about 3.6%
or 360 bar differential if they are using 400 bar as has been said ?
After accounting for losses, you get the same curve regardless of gear. If you use road speed on the x axis (rather than rpm) of course that will stretch the curve left or right but it will be the same curve.godlameroso wrote:If you measure power as a result of rpm then yes the curve will be different than if you use speed and an arbitrary gear. Not saying it's not a wild guess because it is, just that a power curve based on vehicle speed is different. Usually when you put a car on a dyno you put the car in 4th or whatever gear gives you direct drive to see the actual engine power curve. If you do the run in an overdrive gear you will get a different curve because torque is being reduced at the point of measurement.
The horsepower is just an approximation. In fact it doesn't even matter here, as it would simply stretch or compress the diagram in y-direction. Those diagrams are not power curves, but acceleration curves based on telemetry data! Therefore, talking about rpm is imho wrong in that context. 8th gear simply was used to rule out traction, which would otherwise have a huge influence in an acceleration diagram.PlatinumZealot wrote:U have to neasure accelerarion in some form to get horsepower so that author has to tell how how he measured acceleration...
So if I understand you correctly: y axis: acceleration and x axis: velocity. To me this doesn't make sense because acceleration times speed is proportional to power. Ans such a curve would've been even steeper.gandharva wrote: The horsepower is just an approximation. In fact it doesn't even matter here, as it would simply stretch or compress the diagram in y-direction. Those diagrams are not power curves, but acceleration curves based on telemetry data! Therefore, talking about rpm is imho wrong in that context. 8th gear simply was used to rule out traction, which would otherwise have a huge influence in an acceleration diagram.