Have you ever wondered what the HP output and Torque curves for our engines looked like?
Torque is the force delivered by any rotating equipment or machine. When you tighten cylinder head bolts you apply torque. It is measured in force times lever-arm. Like kg x meter or lbs x feet. An electric motor puts out torque and our Mercedes engine puts out torque. A gear box is a torque multiplier: When there is a gear reduction of 3:1, the torque is multiplied tree times. On our W113 cars, fourth gear is 1:1 and the only set of reduction gears is in the rear axle. In the graphs, a rear axle ratio of 3.92 is shown. Therefore, engine torque is multiplied 3.92 times. If you want to know the force at which the tire pushes on the road, you divide the torque at the wheel by the rolling radius of the tire. This force propels the car forward. When you are in a lower gear, like first gear, you have an additional 4.05 reduction (in the G72 4-speed gearbox) and you get four times more force to the tires. This is where very high powered cars sometimes spin their tires: When the force available is greater than the friction between tire and road. Internal combustion engines need to turn up quite fast to develop significant torque. An electric motor does not: It develops it’s highest torque at standstill. This is why a combination of electric motor and gas engine, like in the Toyota Prius, is so successful.
The characteristic of the gas engine to have little torque at idle speed is successfully modified by adding a torque converter. The torque converter multiplies engine torque by about two at idle speed and locks up at about 2000 RPM. At lock-up it transmits engine torque without multiplication. There are losses that become heat: Gearboxes become hot and torque converters need cooling. As a result there is less force available at the rear wheels. This is where advertising comes in: SAE (Society of Automotive Engineers) calculates HP of the engine without losses from driving the oil pump, the alternator, the cooling fan, the distributor or the water pump. DIN (Deutsche Industrie Normen) includes these losses and measures the actual output of the engine at the flywheel. The tables are for a 280 SL/8 engine as sold in Europe 1968 - 1970, US spec. models came with emission control and deliver 160 HP DIN and 24.5 mkp at 4250 RPM.
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