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Old 05-31-2008, 05:09 PM   #1
Scotsman
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To rev or to torque???

I drove the 135i again and this time it wasn't as much fun... I think it's down to the loss of sensation of speed, you feel it's fast but it's so incredibly smooth it feels slightly detached. Driving the non-turbo charged model you get to wring the engine out more as it likes to rev in the upper end of the rpm band. For some reason I like the ability to rev the engine more than I like just having a bunch of artificially aspirated torque under my right foot. I'm sure with the Camaro V8 I'll be able to do all the engine straining I want but still having the naturally aspirated power too.
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Old 06-01-2008, 01:58 AM   #2
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Scotsman View Post
artificially aspirated torque
this my friend gets quote of the day! For me its gotta have torque, just dosent feel like a real car without it. my buddy has some CLR??? AMG coupe I never even felt the thing shift. Its fast but not fun. those cars tend to be in the upper rpm levels, so wouldent that hurt gas mileage??? (not a import car guy) I know I can cruse at 65 mph and be at less than 2K rpm.
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Old 06-01-2008, 02:00 AM   #3
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Originally Posted by TFord View Post
this my friend gets quote of the day! For me its gotta have torque, just dosent feel like a real car without it. my buddy has some CLR??? AMG coupe I never even felt the thing shift. Its fast but not fun. those cars tend to be in the upper rpm levels, so wouldent that hurt gas mileage??? (not a import car guy) I know I can cruse at 65 mph and be at less than 2K rpm.
It would hurt gas mileage because you have to accelerate harder to get the car moving.
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Old 06-01-2008, 02:08 AM   #4
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It would hurt gas mileage because you have to accelerate harder to get the car moving.
I guess that there answers the question TORQUE!
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Old 06-01-2008, 02:14 AM   #5
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I'm staying with Chevy for torque. The Infiniti G37 is lacking low-end torque: 330 horsepower and 270 lb-ft of torque-and that's about all it's lacking. But it just doesn't have that instant hit of 400lbs/ft of torque.

Even the new BMW M3 with V8 engine is lacking torque:

420 horsepower/ 295 lb-ft at 3900 rpm, 8400 rpm max engine speed
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Old 06-01-2008, 06:45 AM   #6
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In my mind, there is no replacement for low end torque.
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Old 06-01-2008, 07:08 AM   #7
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In my mind, there is no replacement for low end torque.
how would you know.... you drive a civic...

jk.

seriously tho, you want a torque motor? drive an LT1 Camaro. the dyno curve...isnt a curve. it spikes at 1800 rpms and stays flat all the way up to 5500
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Old 06-01-2008, 07:59 PM   #8
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seriously tho, you want a torque motor? drive an LT1 Camaro. the dyno curve...isnt a curve. it spikes at 1800 rpms and stays flat all the way up to 5500
Wow! Must be hard to drive smoothly?
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Old 06-01-2008, 11:25 PM   #9
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Torque for me. I started a similar thread a few months ago, but they are different enough.

I've thought about this often enough and I always come to the same conclusion. For the same power, more torque is better than more rpm. The engine has more power availible at any speed, hp=tq*rpm/5252. So a high reving engine gets its power from revs, thereby losing some of its low and mid range power. A torquey motor will still build power as you go through the rpms, but it will have alot more at 3k than a screamer will have at 4k.
Add to it the fact that the higher the rpms, the faster things break. And if they don't break faster they are an awful lot more expensive.

My thoughts are summed up by a quote that I've heard was made in a magazine about the corvette in the mid 80's. Any corner, any gear, any time. Or words to that effect.
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Old 06-01-2008, 11:38 PM   #10
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Torque for me. I started a similar thread a few months ago, but they are different enough.

I've thought about this often enough and I always come to the same conclusion. For the same power, more torque is better than more rpm. The engine has more power availible at any speed, hp=tq*rpm/5252. So a high reving engine gets its power from revs, thereby losing some of its low and mid range power. A torquey motor will still build power as you go through the rpms, but it will have alot more at 3k than a screamer will have at 4k.
Add to it the fact that the higher the rpms, the faster things break. And if they don't break faster they are an awful lot more expensive.

My thoughts are summed up by a quote that I've heard was made in a magazine about the corvette in the mid 80's. Any corner, any gear, any time. Or words to that effect.
I agree with you completely. In this specific instance however, great the N54 bi turbo inline six may be it's simply too smooth too feel like a serious performance engine should.
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Old 06-02-2008, 03:27 AM   #11
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Just so eveyone knows the 135i and 335i make its max torque of 300ft-lbs from 1400-5000 rpm. That is a very broad and flat torque curve.

If making max torque at a rediculously low 1400 rpm isn't enough, then I think the issue is that 300ft-lbs isn't enough or that it is just too smooth for you.
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Old 06-02-2008, 05:47 AM   #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DGthe3 View Post
Torque for me. I started a similar thread a few months ago, but they are different enough.

I've thought about this often enough and I always come to the same conclusion. For the same power, more torque is better than more rpm. The engine has more power availible at any speed, hp=tq*rpm/5252. So a high reving engine gets its power from revs, thereby losing some of its low and mid range power. A torquey motor will still build power as you go through the rpms, but it will have alot more at 3k than a screamer will have at 4k.
Add to it the fact that the higher the rpms, the faster things break. And if they don't break faster they are an awful lot more expensive.

My thoughts are summed up by a quote that I've heard was made in a magazine about the corvette in the mid 80's. Any corner, any gear, any time. Or words to that effect.
I agree for the most part too, but there is another quote/concept that is pretty valid. You want an engine to be torquey because that means basically more power, but....

"It is better to make torque at high rpm, because you can take advantage of gearing."

This is from a Corvette forum (thus has credibility as a GM site LOL), and I recommend this reading to anyone who is into cars and racing.

http://www.vettenet.org/torquehp.html

It does an awesome job describing why a LT1 vette is faster and more powerful than an L98 vette eventhough both engines make a rated 340 ft-lbs of torque.


So really the answer to the question....to rev or to torque? Both
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