A Brief Lesson On Torque And How It Affects Performance

Every petrolhead knows about horsepower and torque, but many people don’t understand how they’re connected. Here’s a quick lesson to understand the basics of torque and how it applies to performance
A Brief Lesson On Torque And How It Affects Performance

There can be no horsepower without torque. I’m not just saying that because I like an engine with a nice, thick, low-end power band. When it comes to internal combustion engines, horsepower is mathematically connected to torque. You can’t have one without the other.

Now I’ll be the first to admit I’m not an engineer. That’s why I contacted a friend of mine from my Ford days who is an engineer to help me explain this. Not only that, he’s driven an E46 M3 through numerous Michigan winters just for the fun of it, so he’s certainly not against high-revving superstar performers. But he’s forgotten more about engines and horsepower and performance applications than most of us will ever know, so I tend to listen when he talks cars. We’ll call him Bob, because Bob’s line of work requires a certain level of anonymity.

With that in mind, Bob says:

A Brief Lesson On Torque And How It Affects Performance

Why 5252? Because that’s the RPM where horsepower and torque cross on a normally scaled dyno plot. Seriously, Google “engine dyno plot” and look at the images. Now, there are some fairly technical reasons why 5252 is the magic number, and if you really want to get that deep into it, there are plenty of technical colleges that offer great engineering programs. Or Google can give you the two-page overview. For our purposes, just know that this is how engines do what they do.

It’s also how dynos do what they do. When you pull onto a rolling road to see how much horsepower you gained (or lost) from your spanking-new cold air induction kit, the dyno isn’t actually measuring horsepower. It measures torque, engine speed, then uses the above equation to calculate horsepower as measured at the wheels.

A Brief Lesson On Torque And How It Affects Performance

That’s all well and good, but what does that mean for real-world applications? There are many different engine combinations that make power in different ways, but for our purposes we’ll break it down to just a couple of arrangements.

One: A large displacement engine that operates at a slower speed. The size allows for larger volumes of air to enter at one time, creating a bigger boom with each firing of the spark plug. This generally results in more rotational force at a slower speed, and that means more horsepower is also available at a slower speed. Typically in these applications, the trade-off is weak performance higher in the rev range, where horsepower likes to live.

Two: A small displacement engine that operates at a higher speed. It might be half the size of large engines, but it makes up for this deficit by spinning faster, thus pushing the same amount of air. The trade-off is a lack of rotational force at lower speed for more horsepower up high, and depending on who you talk to, shorter engine life spans because of extra wear and tear. Working twice as hard does come with consequences.

Per Bob, engines are basically air pumps. The more air you take in, the more fuel you can mix with it to make power. But you also have to “pump” that air out fast enough to make room for more air. Forced induction can certainly help shove more air through the engine, but if the engine can’t get the air back out, it won’t make power.

A Brief Lesson On Torque And How It Affects Performance

This is what happened to cars in the 1970s - emission regulations required engines to operate with restrictive exhaust systems, and the U.S. market was especially brutal. Big V8s still made gobs of torque, but airflow restrictions didn’t let them rev. They still had plenty of twist down low, but ran out of steam just when the real fun was about to begin.

The million-dollar question then is which is better: High revving, small displacement engines or large-displacement engines with lower rev limits? That is really a matter of opinion, because there are so many other factors to consider. Forced induction and gearing certainly make a difference in performance, as does mass, size, and intended use. And it’s not like manufacturers aren’t making big engines that rev like crazy or small engines with lots of twist. But we can at least draw some general conclusions.

A Brief Lesson On Torque And How It Affects Performance

In racing applications, having a wide RPM-range to work with provides more flexibility on the track. Low-end power isn’t nearly as critical because the engine is always operating in the upper ranges. F1 is the perfect example of this with the current 1.6-litre engines making roughly 600bhp and spinning to 15,000 RPM.

In street applications, it’s not that simple. It would take a massive clutch drop for that F1 engine to move a Dodge Ram pickup truck despite having 600 horsepower, and I shudder to think of how long such a mill would last toting three tonnes of ‘Murica. That’s the difference torque makes - it gets things moving so horsepower can keep things moving. And if you’re spending a majority of your time on the street running in the lower RPM range, having something with strong low-end power is at the very least going to be livelier to drive, and easier to enjoy for every day use, because it gets you moving quicker.

But now we’re talking opinion, and that’s for another time. Hopefully you’ve learned a bit more about torque and how it applies to the cars we love.

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Comments

TheGifMan

Wasn’t this supposed to be a video?

12/05/2015 - 16:26 |
0 | 0
Bone

p=2pie(N)(T)/60 thats the relation we use to design prop-shafts where N=engine speed(Max), T=torque,

12/05/2015 - 16:29 |
0 | 0
Gonzalo Ortega

well i drive two cars
my brother’s BYD F0 (1.0) and my dad’s Daewoo Lanos (1.5), both don’t have tacho so i don’t know the RPM i’m driving
but at low RPM the F0 it’s notably less torquier and slower, you need to rev it a bit more to go fast as the Lanos. While the lanos you to just rev it a bit to start moving with enough power to don’t care about stalling
obviously the Lanos has a bit more power (67HP vs 86 HP) but the F0 should weight less, so both are similarly fast but the 1.0 you need to rev a bit more to drive without the powerless feeling

12/05/2015 - 16:43 |
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AX53

Saying “there can be no horsepower without torque” do feel a little bit biased, and surely this whole article is a little bit biased towards V8’s but if you ignore that, the facts are correct. Important thing to note is also the transmissions role in all of this. A big V8 will make more torqe at low speeds, but the transmission will do its work and convert this to a higher speed with trade off in torque division. Likewise the HP engine will use that extra speed and trade it off for multiplied torque trough the transmission, There for the shape of the torque curve / power curve is essentially what matters. Peak power numbers can lie just as much as peak torque numbers.

12/05/2015 - 18:21 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

Horsepower is how fast you hit the wall. Torque is how far you take the wall with you.

12/05/2015 - 18:44 |
3 | 1
Anonymous

The easiest way to measure the theoretical performance of a setup is to calculate the area under the power curve with respect to time spent at each point on it for acceleration from one speed to another based on the gears, shift time, etc.

12/05/2015 - 18:56 |
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Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

In which case torque, at least by the numbers, is a moot point, other than that it is an underlying factor of power.

12/05/2015 - 18:58 |
0 | 0
Jakub

They way my dad told me, Torque is what gets your a** moving

12/05/2015 - 19:31 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

but can it be that horsepower drop before hitting the red line? otherwhise all these AMG’s make a shitt0n more horsepower than they promise to have

12/05/2015 - 19:53 |
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Anonymous

My Mustang redlines at 4750rpm so that 5252rpm is irrelevant? It has a peak torque number at 2750rpm and HP at 4000rpm. On the dyno, the two lines cross over at that 2750 torque peak.

12/05/2015 - 20:02 |
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Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

The two lines cross over on your dyno sheet because the two axis units (lb-ft and hp) do not have the same graduation marks. If both were using the same axis graduations, it would cross at 5252 (using lb-ft and hp). In your case, you would not see them cross on the chart.

12/05/2015 - 21:20 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

What engine and year is this mustang?

12/06/2015 - 15:02 |
1 | 0