Hi All,
I've been thinking about this and am curious to see what others think. Instead of using a percentage for driveline loss, how about we just use the actual loss? Otherwise, based on the way most people do their calculations, the actual driveline loss in the same car would vary between two different HP engines when it shouldn't.
Example; say we take a Viper that makes 400 RWHP and figure it has a driveline loss that would require adding 15% to that # to equal crank HP, which would equate to 60 HP at 15%. Take the same car, same engine, but now modified to yield 500 RWHP. That same 15% figure becomes 75 HP. How can the driveline drag go from taking 60HP to turn, to now 75HP to turn? It doesn't. Maybe we should just settle on an actual driveline loss figure for a stock tranny, gear set and tires. Just a thought.
I've been thinking about this and am curious to see what others think. Instead of using a percentage for driveline loss, how about we just use the actual loss? Otherwise, based on the way most people do their calculations, the actual driveline loss in the same car would vary between two different HP engines when it shouldn't.
Example; say we take a Viper that makes 400 RWHP and figure it has a driveline loss that would require adding 15% to that # to equal crank HP, which would equate to 60 HP at 15%. Take the same car, same engine, but now modified to yield 500 RWHP. That same 15% figure becomes 75 HP. How can the driveline drag go from taking 60HP to turn, to now 75HP to turn? It doesn't. Maybe we should just settle on an actual driveline loss figure for a stock tranny, gear set and tires. Just a thought.