Originally Posted by Ninety-9
To put it another way, Imagine an engine that produces a flat 200ft-lb torque curve from 2000RPM to 7000RPM. That means that at ANY RPM it takes the same amount of force to stop or slow the acceleration. However, it takes a lot more energy to stop movement from a higher RPM.
To put it another way, Imagine an engine that produces a flat 200ft-lb torque curve from 2000RPM to 7000RPM. That means that at ANY RPM it takes the same amount of force to stop or slow the acceleration. However, it takes a lot more energy to stop movement from a higher RPM.
So what about cars that have full torque at say 1900 rpm. Is that a bad thing or a good thing. Or do you constantly want to build torque along with Horsepower?
Mini Cooper S comes to mind here with the max torque at 1900 RPM.