What is BHP?

Author
Discussion

docevi1

Original Poster:

10,430 posts

255 months

Sunday 21st September 2003
quotequote all
A up,
I like to think I know a little about how the engine works (not specifics, just the basics) but something has always puzzled me. What is Brake Horse Power?

I know how it was/is measured and I know it suggests engine power but what does it really represent?

Correct me if I'm wrong but Torque is the turning power of the crankshaft/flywheel/bottom end of the engine? So what is BHP, the speed at which it turns (surely thats the revs)... I just can't understand what BHP represents.

Someone please help me!

MGBV8

160 posts

263 months

Sunday 21st September 2003
quotequote all
www.pumaracing.co.uk/power1.htm

Hope this helps
Paul

docevi1

Original Poster:

10,430 posts

255 months

Sunday 21st September 2003
quotequote all
ah, so BHP/HP/PS what ever you call it doesn't actually relate to anything engine specific but the power output. It doesn't really make sense to me - Torque is sheer turning power, the power at which the wheels are turned, Power is the rate at which it works.

Oops, just remembered my Physics lessons Still, rate at which it works, doesn't have a tangible value in my book

Cheers

ATG

21,319 posts

279 months

Sunday 21st September 2003
quotequote all
Torque isn't power. Torque is a twisting Force. Power is "rate of conversion of energy". Power and torque (most uselfully measured at the rear wheels) are two sides of the same coin. For example, when you consider what is happening when the car is going at its maximum speed, you can express it two ways:-

1. From the point of view of Torque. "The torque on the rear wheels gives rise to a force pushing the car along the road that exactly balances the drag forces that tend to oppose the cars motion (e.g air resistance and friction between the road and tyre, and within the wall of the tyre). The sum of all the forces on the car is zero, i.e. it is in equilibrium and does not acclelerate."

2. From the power point of view. "The power output at the rear wheels supplies energy at exactly the same rate as the car is loosing energy to its environment (e.g. kinetic energy of air that is getting blown away by the car, heat into the air and road due to friction) The flow of energy from the engine into the kinetic energy of the car is exactly equal to the flow of kinetic energy out of the car into its environment, therefore the car is in equilibrium, its kinetic energy remains constant, and thus its speed does not change."

These two statements are saying exactly the same thing.

docevi1

Original Poster:

10,430 posts

255 months

Sunday 21st September 2003
quotequote all
so really BHP/Power and Torque is the same thing. I understand what torque is perfectly, but in my understanding BHP is useless as a measurement.

That helps a little, thanks ATG.

anonymous-user

61 months

Sunday 21st September 2003
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Power is nothing without control.

errr.

I'll get me coat

pvapour

8,981 posts

260 months

Sunday 21st September 2003
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what is bhp? i can only tell you not to ask TVR.

Nik

deltaf

6,806 posts

260 months

Sunday 21st September 2003
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BHP is the rate at which work is done by an engine. Its the combination of torque, revs and time that gives you the bhp figures. Bhp in itself dosent mean jack; torque is where the fun is at!

docevi1

Original Poster:

10,430 posts

255 months

Sunday 21st September 2003
quotequote all
aha, thats what I thought. Torque is the true measure of an engine, BHP doesn't actually mean that much by itself!

Cheers matey!

kevinday

12,268 posts

287 months

Monday 22nd September 2003
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Also remember that a rolling road actually measures torque, then converts it to bhp to tell the punter.

Mr2Mike

20,143 posts

262 months

Monday 22nd September 2003
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docevi1 said:
aha, thats what I thought. Torque is the true measure of an engine, BHP doesn't actually mean that much by itself!

Cheers matey!


No, this is incorrect. Torque means nothing by itself. You can have a static torque applied to something, but no power will be expended and thus nothing will move.

BHP = (Torque(ft/lbs) * RPM) / 5252

You can see that you could have infinite torque, but with 0 RPM you are producing no power and hence you are getting nowhere.

When people say that torque is more important than BHP, what they really mean to say is that they feel it's desirable for a given power to be developed by high torque at low RPM (TVR style) rather than low torque at high RPM (bike engine style).

docevi1

Original Poster:

10,430 posts

255 months

Monday 22nd September 2003
quotequote all
ah, so BHP is the power delivered at certain revs, taking into account the torque...

Makes more sense. I just can't really see the difference between the 2 figures in real life. Ho hum, more of both is better, I know that much.

edc

9,307 posts

258 months

Monday 22nd September 2003
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this might help:

www.seatcupra.net/forums/showthread.php?s=c69833067fd5ea40546fd063eb29102b&threadid=23146


>> Edited by edc on Monday 22 September 12:51

deltaf

6,806 posts

260 months

Monday 22nd September 2003
quotequote all
docevi1 said:
Ho hum, more of both is better, I know that much.


Amen!

Incorrigible

13,668 posts

268 months

Monday 22nd September 2003
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docevi1 said:
Ho hum, more of both is better, I know that much.
Not always true, if you have 2 engines, one making half as much torque at three times the RPM it'll be faster

A longer throw crank will generally make more torque (just like a longer lever) but will not rev to the same redline

This is why you see (especially on older engine designs) that for a range of engines, the one that is best for tuning (race engine) won't always be the one with the highest capacity (I'm thinking specifically here of the Triumph straight 6 engine (you can get a 2.0 to be much faster than the 2.5))

Of course it blows up more often but that wasn't the point was it

Rozza!!!

654 posts

283 months

Monday 22nd September 2003
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Just thought I'd throw this little nugget in that I heard somewhere:

More torque equates to faster acceleration
More BHP equates to higher top speed

Roy.

cptsideways

13,647 posts

259 months

Sunday 26th October 2003
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It was explained to me as such:

A sack of sand weighing 50kg on a rope with a pulley. Imagine you are pulling on the rope/or your engine is spinning a pulley connected to the rope.


It takes 50kg of torque or weight just to lift the 50kg load off the ground. That'd be 50kg of torque then.

To keep lifting that load up requires quite a bit more energy, but theres a time factor & a distance included.

Say lifting it 10m up in 1 min

Therefore: 50kg up 10m in 1min: This is basically what BHP is.

The faster you lift the sack the more bhp you have.

So by doubling the torque you'll lift the sack twice as fast.

Or by doubling the revs/speed you'll lift it twice as fast if you can rev that fast.

A turbo by forcing more air in can double the torque of an engine whilst the revs can stay the same. Though in practice you'd accelerate unless there was hill.

The reason torque drops off at peak revs is usually as not enough air can be sucked into the engine at higher speeds and so the bang in the cylinder becomes less. The bang is converted torque in the first place.

BHP is an old measurement I think, it can also be Kg/M per min as per my description.

Fairgound bellringer game: same hammer but different effect by different people?, that'd be the speed the hammer hits the pin then, (a good technique is all thats needed by the way) same effect as the bang in your engine cylinder.


Hope that makes sense, I think its correct.

Mr2Mike

20,143 posts

262 months

Sunday 26th October 2003
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cptsideways said:
BHP is an old measurement I think, it can also be Kg/M per min as per my description


It could be, but kg/m/minute is most certainly not a SI standard unit! The SI unit of power is the watt (1 joule per second) which is a little small for measuring the output of most engines so kilowatts are generaly used. 1bhp=0.746kW

andycanam

1,225 posts

271 months

Monday 27th October 2003
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It's been said here already but BHP is a calculation derived from Torque and revs.


One thing worth noting is that if you plot the two curves they will always intersect at 5252rpm ie torque(ft'lb)=Bhp.

If you can get a flat torque curve above this 5252rpm threshold the BHP will climb steeply..... hence why F1 engines rev to 19,000rpm.


For me I think Bhp is THE performance figure and torque is just a means to calculate it......
but I also believe Bhp figues should be quoted as an average across a % of the rev range rather than just peak.

No 1

225 posts

257 months

Monday 27th October 2003
quotequote all
edc said:
this might help:

www.seatcupra.net/forums/showthread.php?s=c69833067fd5ea40546fd063eb29102b&threadid=23146



EDC - that's excellent, there's a really good analagy in there.

Rightly or wrongly, I've always convinced myself that torque is how much "ooomph" your car has whereas power is how quickly that "ooomph" accelerates, ie. power is torque acceleration.

My big lumpy Land Rover won't accelerate particularly well, however, neither will it slow down when given a hill to climb, because the engine has loads of turning force. Whereas your little hot-hatches will beat me from the line, but need to change down to get up the hills.

The TVR on the other hand, is a very different matter...