DirtyBird222 wrote:
Simply put...Horsepower is a measurement of torque over time....
Bingo. There is no means, anywhere, to measure horsepower. We measure torque, and use a formula (based on a very old criteria that basically represents how far a single drawhorse can pull a specific weight over a specific distance) to convert that to horsepower.
In other words, all horsepower figures are derived from measured torque over time (which is another way of saying RPM). There is no known method to directly measure horsepower; we can only directly measure torque.
Because of the formula, Horsepower = Torque at 5250 RPM. Always. We get this from the formula where:
HP = [torque ft/lbs x RPM] divided by 5252
1 ft/lb of torque at 5252 RPM is 1 HP at 5252 RPM; the same 1 ft/lb at 10,504 is 2 HP; the same 1 ft/lb at 21,008 RPM is 4 HP. The 1 foot-pound of torque gives all three HP values; all that changes is the RPM where peak torque appears.
Note that sometimes you see power curves where the horsepower and torque curves cross at somewhere other than 5250 RPM. This is your clue that the chart is bogus, because if you use the formula, that is impossible. (Actually, I think its 5252, but what's 2 RPM between friends?)
Torque is a twisting motion. Horsepower is a measure of work.
If torque is increasing, acceleration will increase. If torque is falling, acceleration will decrease. [Note that by "acceleration" we really mean acceleration over time; ie how hard you're getting pushed back into your seat].
Since on a Viper, torque is high at low RPM, and remains high over the powerband, it can initiate wheelspin at will. In an F1 car, torque is low at low RPM ... it may not be enough to overcome the tire's traction and car weight if you pop the clutch at too low revs.
Lets, for argument sake, say the Viper makes 500 lb/ft of torque somewhere in the powerband. Let's also say that the F1 engine also makes 500 lb/ft somewhere in the powerband.
Now, lets further assume that the peak torque in both happens at redline. If you give me a bit of liberty with my figures, to keep the math simple*, we get:
Viper = redline = 5,000 RPM / torque peak 500 ft/lbs @ 5,000 RPM / HP peak 500 @ 5,000 RPM
F1 = redline 20,000 RPM /torque peak 500 ft/lbs @ 20,000 RPM / HP peak 2,000 @ 20,000 RPM
So, they both make the same peak torque. But launching at more than 10,000 RPM is tricky business, so the F1 car is harder to wheelspin. Even at 10 Grand it may not be in the powerband yet. With the Viper, it's right there where your foot always is and you can launch right into high torque, so it's easier to wheelspin.
- All we really have to do here is assume Torque = HP at 5,000, not the correct 5,252 RPM. That keeps the numbers simpler. Then we make the Viper redline 5,000 instead of whatever it is, probably 6,000 or a bit more. With the F1 engine, torque peak is probably well below redline, but the math doesn't lie ... you need 500 lbs/ft to get 2,000 HP at 20K, period; the formula is pretty straightforward. F1 drivers tend to shift in the 12K ~ 17K range, so we might assume that's the actual powerband.
But complex math doesn't help us understand things, so we go with the assumed numbers to get the concept across. If you "get it", it's easy to plug in the real numbers later and still see the relationships.