How does cid make power?

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It depends. And most of it depends on the engine builder. I guess there should be a qualification on what transmission is used.

If they are powerglide cars, then I’d want the power to hang on past peak longer. You want to stay above peak torque when your RPM fall back on the shift.

If it’s a 3 speed you can narrow up the power curve a bit but you lose power past peak. Once you go to 4 or better yet 5 gears, then you can narrow up the power curve even tighter. And that means you won’t have as much power past peak.

The latter two scenarios make the car harder to drive. You can’t short shift or the engine drops below peak torque and it’s a pig off the gear change.

Shift late and the power falls off so fast the car actually slows down before the shift. You can see this on a G meter if you data log.
When compairing two motors with simular shaped curves and one is higher at every rpm point it is easier to pick the winner with some certainty. When the shapes are different (flat vs peaky) or peaks occur at different levels (higher and lower) and or at different different rpm points (requiring different gear ratios) it all gets complicated. There are trade off points somewhere along the spectrum of each variable. Often it can be hard to judge where the trade off points are. Ultimately it will be a stopwatch or checkerd flag that decides at a race track. And on the street it's decided by a fun meter attached to the seat of your pants. This might explain why so many street motors appear to not be optimized for the race track, whatever type of race track that might be. For what its worth, I've looked and not been able to find a standarard for calibration of a fun meter.
 
When compairing two motors with simular shaped curves and one is higher at every rpm point it is easier to pick the winner with some certainty. When the shapes are different (flat vs peaky) or peaks occur at different levels (higher and lower) and or at different different rpm points (requiring different gear ratios) it all gets complicated. There are trade off points somewhere along the spectrum of each variable. Often it can be hard to judge where the trade off points are. Ultimately it will be a stopwatch or checkerd flag that decides at a race track. And on the street it's decided by a fun meter attached to the seat of your pants. This might explain why so many street motors appear to not be optimized for the race track, whatever type of race track that might be. For what its worth, I've looked and not been able to find a standarard for calibration of a fun meter.


EXACTLY!!
 
Post #215: 'Who cares about torque'.

Anybody who wants to get as much HP rom their engine should care about TQ, because TQ is one of two components reqd to make hp, the other is rpm.....

I have a very interesting article from an old SS & DI magazine, Dec 1979.
About rod length. When you build a stroker engine, stroke is typically increased. And that reduces the rod/stroke ratio:

"At low rpm the engine depends on the suction of the piston for cyl filling & the short rod gets things moving quickly. At high rpm, the inertia of the moving air helps out the induction & the engine breathes in some ways like a two cycle & the smoother slower accelerations of the long rod are more compatible."

"On a short rod engine the point at which the rod is at right angles to the stroke occurrs higher in the bore, which increases the compression of the burning A/F....This is one reason that a short rod engine seems to have more tq & pulling power".

"One of the most intriguing cases of the long rod/short rod situation working was found in the junior fuelers just a few years ago. "

301 engine , 3" stroke, 4"bore, R/S ratio 1.90. 307 engine 3.88"bore, 3.25" stroke 1.75 R/S ratio.
"......despite running nearly 15 mph slower they [ the short rod ] would regularly et one or two tenths quicker."


I have already said that you need torque AND RPM to make horsepower. In my example we are talking about what happens AFTER peak torque. As long as horsepower is going up, torque doesn’t matter.

Ever seen a dyno curve for a Comp Eliminator or Pro Stock engine? Or even a decent bracket engine?

As for the SS&DI article (best car magazine EVER…too bad Hot Rod bought it and killed it…I’ve never forgiven HR for that shitty deal) if you are UP 15 MPH you have way more HOSEPOWER. You just don’t have it hooked up. MPH is horsepower. ET is hook.
 
Per another thread on this forum, if someone asked for a guess on power output, and didn't tell you the cubic inch, but told you everything else.... could you give a decent guess? I couldn't.

(I've got an engine with 11 to 1, ported aluminum heads, 750 holley dp, solid lifter 250° at .050 cam, edelbrock intake, 1 7/8 headers, pulls cleanly to 6500. How much horsepower do I have?)

What's the first question?
 
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This doesn’t explain why so many strokers are giant underachievers.

Sure it does - stroke isn't the best way to get the CID, it's just the only way left once bore is at max. The engine will still make more power, just not as much more as with bore. An increase in bore size will pay off to a much greater extent since piston area increases with the square of the radius.
Also, the piston speed is higher with a stroker which would suggest the need for an over-capable head. Piston speed obviously has an effect on how fast the engine is trying to move the air through the port and past the valve. Trying to feed a bigger motor from the same tiny ports is always going to pull the peak rpms down. Most folks don't even want to play with offset rockers, so it's no surprise most strokers run out of huff over 5500.
Look at 410 sprint motors - they're running near a 4" stroke, but much larger bores (4.1+). They wind out past 8k and make over 800 hp as a result. The biggest difference between a 4.04x4 408 and that 4.13x3.8 410? The 410 heads flow 400+ cfm. Sure, the smaller bore won't make as much as the bigger, even with those massive heads - but the better heads would damn sure feed the 408 better than any over-the-counter head on the market today.

Look at the PONTIAC. Long stroke tractor engines. Ou can make 600 HP at 5500 but it wold get killed by 600 HP at 7000.

Sounds like the same issue as above. I suspect Pontiac gets as much love from the aftermarket head guys as MOPARs do.

Edit: 7000 is NOTHING with today’s valve train components.

Only applies when cheap-asses actually invest in good valve train ;) Most guys don't, then whine about underachieving results. Just look how many people shy away from doing any B3 type corrections to their heads - and all the guys who do tend to have better results.
Similar for custom-ground cams. Ramp rates should have some relationship to total lift AND geometry, otherwise losing valve control can happen super early. But that applies to all engines independent of CID. It's just that to get larger strokes to breathe better, it requires more of everything to run 'right'.
 
Ten pages trying to convince a member that two plus two equals four......

Problem is that's wasn't question
I stated in the OP i'm not talking about how cid makes torque and torque makes hp
So people been telling me for ten pages a question they think I'm asking.
And it's my fault cause I couldn't come with a clear question cause it's kind of abstract, which I think I figured out and started a new thread.
 
Ten pages trying to convince a member that two plus two equals four......

What I'm trying to get at is the conventional wisdom here is if built same/similar the larger cid gonna always make more peak and under the curve hp and if this true I can't see what stopping the smaller cid spin up to catch up and make similar power since the top end is obviously capable of ir. Everyone says it obvious and been explained to me a million times and I must be really dumb cause I haven't seen it or get it.
 
I'll try again.
I'll agree, displacement, ON ITS OWN, doesn't guarantee power. Look at the 1760 cu in four banger that makes 290 hp. But if you FEED the displacement increase, power increases. Rpm has limits as to what displacement it can overcome, and what gearing is required to overcome the bigger motor can become onerous.
If I have a 6500 rpm 632, that makes 900 hp n/a, with a 3.55 gear, how much rpm and gear ratio will your 273 need to have to beat me?
 
If I have a 6500 rpm 632, that makes 900 hp n/a, with a 3.55 gear, how much rpm and gear ratio will your 273 need to have to beat me?

15,000 ish rpm's and 8:1 to tie :)
 
The four banger mentioned above was the world's fastest vehicle at one time. (Faster than the then current airspeed record. )
They didn't have the technology at that time to make an engine more powerful by other means, so they made it BIGGER. Displacement, then, was how you made more power.
Post ww1, after technology had made leaps and bounds, a much smaller engine became the land speed record holder..... for about ten minutes. Till a huge, inefficient, airplane engined car cruised past the record, with out having to have huge rpm.

And sometimes conventional wisdom is conventional, because it IS wisdom.
 
The four banger mentioned above was the world's fastest vehicle at one time. (Faster than the then current airspeed record. )
They didn't have the technology at that time to make an engine more powerful by other means, so they made it BIGGER. Displacement, then, was how you made more power.
Post ww1, after technology had made leaps and bounds, a much smaller engine became the land speed record holder..... for about ten minutes. Till a huge, inefficient, airplane engined car cruised past the record, with out having to have huge rpm.

Displacement has lot of advantages and not against idea of started from a larger displacement makes sense especially in a street why car manufacturers generally go that way, I got 360 now thinking about 440 or maybe 400/440 stroker in the future.

But I also like the idea of turning 170, 273 7000+ rpm
 
After I eat a lot of tacos, the cubic inches of my *** can make lots of power.
 
Displacement has lot of advantages and not against idea of started from a larger displacement makes sense especially in a street why car manufacturers generally go that way, I got 360 now thinking about 440 or maybe 400/440 stroker in the future.

But I also like the idea of turning 170, 273 7000+ rpm
Build the 400. I have a thing for big bore short stroke engines.
 
If conventional wisdom led you over a cliff........ it would not be conventional (they'd all be dead) OR wisdom.
Maybe it's conventional until we get to the cliff :) I get what yours saying.
 
I'll try again.
I'll agree, displacement, ON ITS OWN, doesn't guarantee power. Look at the 1760 cu in four banger that makes 290 hp. But if you FEED the displacement increase, power increases. Rpm has limits as to what displacement it can overcome, and what gearing is required to overcome the bigger motor can become onerous.
If I have a 6500 rpm 632, that makes 900 hp n/a, with a 3.55 gear, how much rpm and gear ratio will your 273 need to have to beat me?


Again, you ignore architecture.

I could build a 572 that would make the same power and drag that 632 like a little *****.
 
After I eat a lot of tacos, the cubic inches of my *** can make lots of power.

HEY!! I gotta sleep tonight. I don’t need nightmares about your *** and tacos!!! Damn…I can’t stop thinking about it now. How will I sleep??

All I can see is you shitting your brains out like a dude in a truck stop stall in 1989 who got his *** kicked by the Easter bunny.

Oh great. Now I’ll be reliving that real life **** show.
 
15,000 ish rpm's and 8:1 to tie :)

Then spin the 632 to 15k, now who's winning again? This is why this argument is circular. The 'common wisdom' is correct - bigger wins every time, but you keep throwing imaginary crutches at the 'bigger' motor. Apples to apples, displacement wins. HP is just torque times rpm, and torque is just force at a distance. Increase the force (bore), the distance (throw) and you increase torque. Displacement ups both of those. Whether an engine can continue to make HP above the torque peak all depends on the heads and the valvetrain. Using 'similar' build arguments is meaningless with such a rhetorical question.
 
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