
Originally Posted by
Dougal
...... Max torque at 100km/h is the best for drivability, most factory diesels hit this.
Not sure I agree with this except as a very rough rule of thumb.
As a rule of thumb, you would want maximum torque at the speed you normally drive at, in the gear that you normally drive in. But this assumes that there is sufficient power available at that engine speed, which is not necessarily the case. For driveability, it is probably more important to have a wide spread of torque, in other words, not a sharp peak. This often means peak torque at quite low rpm, at which rpm there would be insufficient power to drive the vehicle at 100kph. (remember, power is torque x rpm, and power required goes up roughly as the square of the speed). A rather extreme example would be the 2.25 diesel, which produces maximum power at 1750rpm. if geared to do this rpm in top at 100kph (it is nearer 3000 at 100kph), you would never reach 100! Not in top, anyway, maybe third.
My view is that the key torque consideration for driveability, at least with a manual box, is the torque available at normal clutch engagement rpm. This figure is rarely if ever quoted, and you have to guess at how good it is from where the peak is, unless you have the complete curve.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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