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Vr38dett Engine Dyno!!!
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Originally posted by mikey View Postwait a minute..... wouldn't you use NM for torque rating? and KW for power rating?
So that means....456hp and 442lb/ft.
I wish the old one's had torque ratings that close to the hp rating.
torque is a factor of dispacement and boost pressure.
horsepower is a factor of torque x RPM.
if you want to make more torque than horsepower, limit RPM's, or run small turbos that make lots of torque and not lots of horsepower.
the RB26 is a small displacement, high revving motor. Add displacement or take away revs and you'll see similarly matched numbers.1992 GTR - 2.7L, GT2871R's, forged bottom end, big valves, 270* cams, R34 getrag
2000 Honda Insight - 70+mpg daily driver
2003 Sierra 2500HD Diesel - Tow vehicle
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Originally posted by Terrh View Posttorque is a factor of dispacement and boost pressure.
horsepower is a factor of torque x RPM.
if you want to make more torque than horsepower, limit RPM's, or run small turbos that make lots of torque and not lots of horsepower.
the RB26 is a small displacement, high revving motor. Add displacement or take away revs and you'll see similarly matched numbers.
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Originally posted by TK-GTS View Posttechnically there are no hp specs on the gtr since they are all different.
Its weird cause i thought it had 485 WHP stock but I've also seen youtube vids of the dyno chart said its only putting out 432 hp/424 ft-lb (this is just the most recent one i saw) Is there really that big of a gap?!?!Double track drift, yo.
http://www.meh.ro/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/meh.ro5228.gif
(o▫o sκylιnε o▫o)
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Originally posted by EliteGTR View PostThis is on an engine dyno. As a far as each being different, I dont buy that. If they are assembled by hand using the same specs how much difference can there be? probably more consistent then machines doing it.
Dyno results from different areas should not be used for hp/trq comparisons, it's not accurate. HP/trq numbers don't mean anything, trap speeds do. Unless you are looking to be a number queen and still run 15's
Remember, dynojets, dynapacks, dynodynamics, mustangs etc. all read differently, this is widely known....
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Originally posted by EliteGTR View PostThis is on an engine dyno. As a far as each being different, I dont buy that. If they are assembled by hand using the same specs how much difference can there be? probably more consistent then machines doing it.60% of the time my car is on the road all the time.
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Originally posted by Terrh View Posttorque is a factor of dispacement and boost pressure.
horsepower is a factor of torque x RPM.
if you want to make more torque than horsepower, limit RPM's, or run small turbos that make lots of torque and not lots of horsepower.
the RB26 is a small displacement, high revving motor. Add displacement or take away revs and you'll see similarly matched numbers.
Torque is a factor of Force x Distance, nothing to do with boost pressure, although it may increase relatively. Measuring torque is done by adiobatic compression which is change of pressure relative to volume (simplified version)
Power For Imperial or US customary units Horsepower is a factor of
[RPM * Torque (inch-lbs)]/63000
Power For SI (metric) Units
Power (KW) = {[(RPM*2pi)/60s]*Torque(N-m)}
For US customary units/ Imperial Boost pressure is relative to Force (usually measured in lbs) / Area
Or, Pressure = (roh looks like a P)(g)(h) when discussing fluids.
Where P is the density of the fluid relative to water (1.94 lb/ft^3)
G is the force of gravity (32.2ft/s^2)
H is the change in displacement of the fluid.
This will give you Lbs/ft^2, so to convert to psi multiply by 12^2 (inches squared)
your boost gauge works on this principle by tapping into the system to see how far it moves fluid through a pipe.
Enjoy, you're now qualified mechanical engineers.
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