Tuesday, November 13, 2018

Truck’ese 101, Ver 2.0: Power to the People


The How’s and Why’s are critical in writing specification and averting failure. In the long-game of 8-12 years of living with a truck, it really does pay to get it right on the front end. Retroactive adjustments in specification (through refit and/or reprogramming) can cost many times more than if it was spec’ed properly on the front-end, or worse yet, compromise the longevity and usefulness of the truck in the first place.

Today’s topic: Power

Engine manufacturers will talk about 2-basic engine ratings, torque and horsepower (throw in “torque rise” if you are talking about big trucks). There are lots of misunderstandings about how these two interrelate. This often this causes misuse of the terms and they aren’t interchangeable. An executive summary of the terms and what they mean? Torque is a physical measurement of how much effort an engine can produce, whereas horsepower is a calculation of how much work that effort can produce over a period of time.

When engines are being developed or optimized, they are installed on an instrument called a dynamometer. In the crudest sense a dynamometer is a device that can take something that makes effort while in radial motion (IE: an engine’s rotation) and measure its output in terms of force. This is done by placing a fluid coupling between the engine’s output flange and a scale. On these devices the amount of “coupling” between the engine and the load can be varied, allowing the engine to run at maximum capability across a variety of rotational speeds. The effort produced is then measured though a system of levers and transducers to determine the force the engine makes, usually measured in lbs./ft in non-metric speaking countries.

So, let’s say you are running an engine at full capability, but stalling it with the coupling so it is only capable of turning 2000 RPM. Your dynamometer has an effective 3-foot lever which it measures force from, and at the end of that lever you are measuring 85lbs of effort. In this scenario our test engine makes 255 lbs./ft torque (potential twist) at that rotational speed (85lbs X 3 ft).

Regarding horsepower: the nature of any internal combustion engine is that it will make peak torque at a speed that is less (sometimes significantly) than it is capable of turning. After an engine reaches peak torque, the effort it can produce will drop off quickly as engine speed increases, but as the engine is turning faster it makes more “power” anyway (remember, work & time). But if this same test engine is still generating 160 lbs./ft of torque at 4500 RPM, we can do some math a calculate that it is generating 137HP {(160X4500)/5252} at that speed. Horsepower then is a relative measurement of the amount of work an engine can get done by applying effort over time. These are hypothetical figures produced by a hypothetical engine, but to put it into perspective this is somewhat typical of what your mom’s full-size station wagon would have produced in the mid 1970’s, so this is kind of a “just get it done” engine in the passenger car world.

Segueing to a big-truck engine we will find that the engine speeds drop dramatically, and at the same time torque ratings rise a lot. These are large engines and they turn slowly. There are a variety of technical reasons for this, but for expediency we will say it is easier to control the dynamic forces associated with their big, heavy internal parts and combustion processes at lower speeds, and the lower speeds reduce fuel consumption.

Torque-rise is the difference (in percentage) between the maximum torque an engine will produce, and the amount of torque it is producing at its maximum rated horsepower.

Let’s say our 12.9 liter diesel in the shiny new Kenworth we just bought is producing 410HP at 1850 RPM (kind of a typical mid-upper range fleet rating). I won’t bore you to tears with the math, but that means the engine is producing 1164 lbs./ft of torque at 1850 RPM. Now let’s say this same engine will produce its peak torque at 1300 rpm, and that figure is 1450 lbs./ft. This gives you a 25% torque-rise (25% more effort available at the torque peak than at HP peak).

Why is this important? Remember, the slower an engine turns, he less fuel it consumes (Fewer rotations mean fewer firing sequences, fewer times filling the cylinders, fewer times injecting diesel to cause combustion), so there is incentive to want to turn them as slowly as practical while maintaining sufficient power. So, while it is possible to spin this engine at 1850 rpm all day, it isn’t cost effective. You need access to all that power to accelerate the load, but not to cruise or maintain speed.

If however we choose to gear the truck so the engine is turning 1500 rpm at its optimal road speed, we are above the speed at which the engine makes maximum effort (1300 RPM), but below where it makes maximum power (1850 RPM). That allows us to optimize gear selection so that as our driver starts into a hill at cruise, the truck will slow (and so will the engine) but likely only to the point that the torque has increased enough to counter the additional load (due to torque rise). You’ve used the available torque-rise as a buffer to counter the truck’s tendency to slow-down on hills.

Hopefully this has given you a better understanding of interpreting the technical-ese associated with gearing and engines. Do it right and both your owners and drivers are happy. You burn less fuel so your costs are less and the driver isn’t having to downshift at every small hill. Next time you shake his hand, you may not feel calluses from all the shifting he’s had to do!   

                                                                                                                               
© 2018 D.W. Williams