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10-19-2005 07:11 PM #1
Dyno
can anyone tell exactly how a dyno works, how it reads horsepower and torquei mean is it like RPMs or something that says this engine puts out this much horsepower or is it exhaust or intake or compression i don't know exactly what equals horsepower or torque, what they hook the machine up to in the vehicle.
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10-21-2005 03:57 PM #2
well any guesses
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10-21-2005 04:37 PM #3
You can get an idea of how a dynamometer works in the following way: Imagine that you turn on a car engine, put it in neutral and floor it. The engine would run so fast it would explode. That's no good, so on a dynamometer you apply a load to the floored engine and measure the load the engine can handle at different engine speeds. You might hook an engine to a dynamometer, floor it and use the dynamometer to apply enough of a load to the engine to keep it at, say, 7,000 rpm. You record how much load the engine can handle. Then you apply additional load to knock the engine speed down to 6,500 rpm and record the load there. Then you apply additional load to get it down to 6,000 rpm, and so on. You can do the same thing starting down at 500 or 1,000 rpm and working your way up. What dynamometers actually measure is torque (in pound-feet), and to convert torque to horsepower you simply multiply torque by rpm/5,252.Objects in the mirror are losing
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10-21-2005 09:40 PM #4
thank you that was very informative
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