IHADAV8.com - Turbo Buick Tech, and Nonsense
General => IHADAV8 Playground => Topic started by: reality on August 28 2020, 11:08:33 AM
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If you have a NA car on a dyno, will the numbers be different according to tire height? If so, why and how?
Tire weights assumed equal.
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That's like asking if a bias-ply will dyno different than a radial.
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Apparently the further the weight is from the center the more torque it uses to spin the tire.
Physics is not my strong suit.
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Tire/wheel weight would have more effect unless the tire size is a radical difference. Air density from time of day would have more effect on results.
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Thanks Guys ,
the number being thrown around is 20hp from 17 to 19 in rim.
Is this true?
A 4.0-1 rear gear with a 26 in tire.
Add 10% to the tire and 10% to the tire
4.4 gear 28,6 tire equals the same hp torque?
why or why not?
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I doubt 20hp unless a major weight difference between tire and rim.
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I would think you are right if you have a 10% larger tire but shift the diff gears by 10% this should be neutral?
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OsmR3F6QMG8
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Dyno results are tested in final drive 1to 1 in 3rd gear or what ever your final 1 to 1 gear is. Changing tire height, rim size or footprint can all be lost accelerating from 1st gear to the final drive 1 to 1 street driving. 19" rims may look cool but suck trying to get out of the hole with a car that has any type of power. That few HP gain that's still in a given margin of error doesn't mean squat in real word driving. Taking the car to the track and change tires, tune, fuel, carb/turbo and chassis will give you more useful data and results.