While horsepower is often considered when shopping for a vehicle, what about that "other" engine rating: torque?
Specifically, what are the differences
between horsepower and torque? If you flip through the pages of any automotive
publication, you'll notice that these two measurements are commonly listed under
vehicle specifications. And while the average car enthusiast knows that both
horsepower and torque play a role in performance, most of them don't understand
exactly how or why.
Let's begin by explaining the technical
difference between the two. Horsepower is defined as the amount of energy required to lift
550 pounds, one foot, in one second. From this definition you can see that the
components of horsepower are force, distance and time. Distance and time are
self-explanatory but force, specifically a twisting force, is what torque is
all about.
Remember that the initial energy
that moves a car forward starts in the combustion chamber in the form of an
explosion. This explosion forces a piston (or group of pistons) down in a straight
line, which pushes on a connecting rod and turns the engine's crankshaft. It's
this turning crankshaft where the twisting force of torque initiates. From there
the force is carried through a flywheel, transmission, driveshaft, axle(s) and
wheel(s) before moving the car.
The measurement of torque is stated
as pound-feet and represents how much twisting force is at work. If you can
imagine a plumber's pipe wrench attached to a rusty drainpipe, torque is the
force required to twist that pipe. If the wrench is two feet long, and the plumber
pushes with 50 pounds of pressure, he is applying 100 pound-feet of torque
(50 pounds x 2 feet) to turn the pipe (depending on the level of rust, this
may or may not be enough torque). As you may have noticed, this measurement
of torque does not include time. One-hundred pound-feet of torque is always
100 pound-feet torque, whether it is applied for five seconds or five years.
So, if you want a quick answer to the difference between horsepower and torque,
just keep in mind that horsepower involves the amount of work done in a given
time, while torque is simply a measurement of force and is thus a component
of horsepower.
To see how torque and horsepower
interact, imagine your favorite SUV (everyone has one of those, right?) at the
base of a steep hill. The engine is idling and the gear lever is in the "Four-Low"
position. As the driver begins to press on the throttle, the engine's rpm increases,
force is transmitted from the crankshaft to each wheel, and the SUV begins to
climb upward. The twisting force going to each wheel as the vehicle moves up
the hill is torque. Let's say the engine is at 3,000 rpm, the gear ratio is
3, and the vehicle is creating 300 pound-feet of torque. Using the following
formula, we can calculate horsepower:
Take the torque of 300
multiplied by a shaftspeed of 1000 (3000 rpm divided by a gear ratio of 3) for
a total of 300,000. Divide 300,000 by 5,252 and you get 57.1 horsepower that
the SUV is making as it begins to ascend the hill. It is interesting to note
that, since 5,252 is used to calculate horsepower by way of torque and shaftspeed,
it is also the number in the rpm range at which torque and horsepower are always
equal. If you were to view the horsepower and torque curves of various engines,
you would notice that they always cross at 5,252 rpm.
So now we have a technical
understanding of how torque interacts with horsepower, but let's move beyond
that to some real-world examples. For instance, we all know that a car moves
from a dead stop in 1st or low gear, yet as the car's speed increases, the gears
must be moved up through 2nd, 3rd and 4th to maintain acceleration. This is
because at low speeds the transmission's gears work to transmit maximum torque
from the engine to the wheels. You want this because it takes more force, or
torque, to move a vehicle that is at rest than it does to move a vehicle in
motion (Newton's 1st Law). At the same time, once a vehicle is underway, you
want less torque and more horsepower to maintain a high speed. This is because
horsepower is a measurement of work done and includes a time element (such as
wheel revolutions per minute necessary to maintain 75 mph).
Since entire books have been written
on the concepts of horsepower and torque, it's not realistic to try and cover
them fully in a single column.
Finally, let me leave
you with my favorite phrase about the relationship between horsepower and torque:
Horsepower is what you read about, torque is what you feel.