Effects of weight reduction?
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Effects of weight reduction?
Ignoring variable such as aero drag and traction, are acceleration times directly related to weight and HP? ie:
Will a 150HP car weighing 1500lbs perform the same as a 300HP car weighing 3000lbs?
I guess this also assumes both are optimally geared for their rpm range.
If not, is there a generic formula to calculate the difference?
Thanks,
Gene
Will a 150HP car weighing 1500lbs perform the same as a 300HP car weighing 3000lbs?
I guess this also assumes both are optimally geared for their rpm range.
If not, is there a generic formula to calculate the difference?
Thanks,
Gene
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There are a whole lot of small effects to take into consideration.
Rolling resistance is one of them.
Another is that rotating components can only be so light... equivalent flywheel weights would result in a bigger chunk of the small engine's power going to inertial parastic loss.
However, depending on the degree of optimisation, that could also be spun as favorable to the small engine, since the rotating components attached to the large engine will have to be bigger, stronger and heavier.
In any case, a lighter car will always out handle a heavier car at a similar level of development. A 1500# car would RADICALLY out handle a 3000# car.
Rolling resistance is one of them.
Another is that rotating components can only be so light... equivalent flywheel weights would result in a bigger chunk of the small engine's power going to inertial parastic loss.
However, depending on the degree of optimisation, that could also be spun as favorable to the small engine, since the rotating components attached to the large engine will have to be bigger, stronger and heavier.
In any case, a lighter car will always out handle a heavier car at a similar level of development. A 1500# car would RADICALLY out handle a 3000# car.
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yes, goto any 1/4 mile calulator that inputs weight & HPThe Dark Side of Will wrote:Not true.Pyrthian wrote:got nothing to back me up, but I have always heard a rough approximation that a car that weighs twice as much, needs 4 times the power to accelerate as quickly.
its a straight line relationship - hp vs weight
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right. if you look at the definition of torque, its directly/linearly linked to weight. and, hp is directly & linearly linked to HP's. thereby, twice the weight needs twice the HP - or - more accuratly - twice the torque. this is also all assuming many other things held equal. traction & power curve being biggies.
but, this is all mathmagic. I would expect if you took a 10 HP go-kart, doubled its weight & put in a 2nd 10hp motor - the lighter one would be faster.
but, this is all mathmagic. I would expect if you took a 10 HP go-kart, doubled its weight & put in a 2nd 10hp motor - the lighter one would be faster.
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traction is linear, except when the tire squishes from the weight. Then you get more contact area, and it is no longer linear. Traction is a measurement of the force of friction between the tire and the road, I covered the foce of friction in my previous post.
Just to clarify these rules apply to weight and Wheel HP as variables while everything else remains constant.
Just to clarify these rules apply to weight and Wheel HP as variables while everything else remains constant.
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Visco-elastic friction is NOT linear.
Coefficient of friction is greater at small normal force than large normal force. A tire can generate greater lateral g's on a light car than a heavy one (and thus more accelerative and braking traction as well).
The lighter car will launch harder for this reason.
Coefficient of friction is greater at small normal force than large normal force. A tire can generate greater lateral g's on a light car than a heavy one (and thus more accelerative and braking traction as well).
The lighter car will launch harder for this reason.
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Thanks for the replies. I was without access for a day.
Several years ago, I started to build a light weight car. The car is a Locost, and is a replica of the late 50s Lotus 7 series car.
I got into Fieros and the project was pushed to the side.
I am going to get back on it. I was originaly going to use a Thunderbird Turbo Coupe as the donor.
Now that I work in the salvage yard, I have a lot more access to various parts.
I have a 93 Taurus SHO engine put back I am going to use. A rough calculation puts the final weight between 1300-1500 lbs.
The SHO is easily modded to 250HP NA
Add me at 230lbs and the fun should begin.
Gene
Several years ago, I started to build a light weight car. The car is a Locost, and is a replica of the late 50s Lotus 7 series car.
I got into Fieros and the project was pushed to the side.
I am going to get back on it. I was originaly going to use a Thunderbird Turbo Coupe as the donor.
Now that I work in the salvage yard, I have a lot more access to various parts.
I have a 93 Taurus SHO engine put back I am going to use. A rough calculation puts the final weight between 1300-1500 lbs.
The SHO is easily modded to 250HP NA
Add me at 230lbs and the fun should begin.
Gene
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- Posts: 65
- Joined: Wed Jun 01, 2005 11:46 pm
- Location: Lexington, KY