GORV - Digital Magazine Issue #29 | Page 21

RV FEATURE The terms ‘power’ and ‘torque’ are interrelated but often misunderstood. In the tow vehicle context, power is the ability for the engine to perform a certain amount of work over a given length of time. If you want to drive fast, you need a lot of power to do so. Until recently that ability was measured in horsepower. But if you need to climb a steep hill, your vehicle needs a lot of torque – you only need a lot of power if you want to climb that hill quickly. The concept of measuring power stems (in 1702) from a Thomas Savery. He felt it feasible to compare the work done over time by horses’ ability to lift weight. Eighty years later, engineer James Watt used that concept to help market his new steam engine (a working replica of which is in Sydney’s Power House museum). James Watt determined that a typical brewery horse could lift 33,000 pounds (14,960 kg) 30 cm per minute. It was later found that this was too low and also that the horse’s peak power for a short time is many times higher. By comparison, humans can produce 1.2  horse power (hp) briefly and about 0.1 hp indefinitely. Usain Bolt needed to exert 3.5  hp for his 9.58-second 100-metre world record in 2009. Horse power can now also be expressed in watts: in much of the world, 1 hp is about 745 watts. Americans and the French regard it as marginally less (presumably having slightly inferior horses). Torque, however, is a force that rotates things and its origin goes back to Archimedes! A  car engine’s pistons create torque that spins the crankshaft, i.e., a force is applied at a distance, so measuring torque involves a distance and an applied force. TORQUE FOR TOWING In the context of tow vehicles, power is a combination of torque and engine speed. A heavy truck’s engine typically produces a great deal of torque, but because it does so only at low engine speed (as compared with cars), it does not have or need (for example) the power of a Ferrari that revs up to 8000 rpm. To enable that truck to use the available power to propel it on a flat road at 100 km/h – or climb a steep hill at far less speed – gearing is used to increase the effective torque. This is much like using a lever to lift a heavy rock – you move the top of that lever a long way, and the bottom of the lever only moves a centimetre or so. The power you exert, however, remains much the same, but the torque is much greater. The supreme example of the difference between power and torque is the BMW i3’s electric engine. Its power is only 114 kW (152 hp) but it produces “POWER IS A COMBINATION OF TORQUE AND ENGINE SPEED.” / 21