Did I say slow break ins ONLY happen with turbodiesels? I'm just mentioned that it does happen remarkably often for turbodiesels. Not to mention 300,000km overhaul intervals for some hard working units (towing, off road racing, etc). Tristan and his wild assumptions...
I'm not saying gears change power levels. I'm saying narrow power bands need tight ratios to keep them in their usable rpm range. Maybe tristan is simply too mentally lazy to think about what I mean...
With wide powerbands, you can achieve similiar or superior overall performance with less gears. This is very obvious on the exits of tight turns. No need to shift so often and loose time to gearsifts.
I was just saying for a given peak power, wider powerband is superior overall, irrspective of engine type. BTW, most quantify the width of a powerband via absolute rpm numbers alone. This is VERY wrong.
Lets say a 7000rpm redline engine has a 3000rpm powerband (4000-7000rpm). An engine with a 5000 rpm redline has a 2800rpm powerband (2000-4800rpm), peak power at say 4600rpm and peak torque at 2000rpm, all the while keeping a relatively flat torque curve. Given they both produce the same peak power, the 2nd unit actually has a superiory powerband. Why? Because a larger proportion of the usable revs (idle to redline, assuming both engines have enough torque to idle of in a smooth start) is usable for good acceleration. The 2nd unit could also make do with say 5 instead of the other's 6 gears and still perform similiarly or even better. Of course, I'm saying this is true for all engine types, though tristan might just come up with some wild excuse or assumption just to try to piss off someone he doesn't personally like. And of course, this is rather simplistic, though of course to really understand this needs numerical and graphical data.
This all assumes that aall else is closely matched, of course. Or tristan is again too mnetally lazy to deduce such an obvious assumption.
Multitasking a "new" buzzword? Wow, didn't know that. That word has existed since computer geeks and the idea of concurrency in computers existed, so how?!? If I'm just another join anything new bandwagon guy, then why do hate Windows vitsa so much? It's new, right? Well, it's basically nothing more than a resource hog with no real benefit to date, that's why. I tried and found nothing particluar good about it. Does a great job of turning your multicore Ferrari into a stegosaurus. Again, tristan and his fanboy accusations...
I'll let you in on something about me. I used to be somewhat like you, believing RWD and petrol engines are the only way to go for race and general perfomane applications. Petrol engines eem the best not because they are truely fundamnetally superior to all other enigines. It's the result of having enjoyed a seriusly overprivaledged level of development. The more one delves into technological history and scinece, the more apparent it gets. Remmeber flame, ignition, killer exhaust fumes that spew out sulphur clouds, etc? Then again, tristan might not be a student of technological history...
But when alternatives are allowed to develop as well as that particular narrow category of vehicles, any reasonable and logical person is forced to reevaluate things. There's more than one way to achieve a given requirement.
Wind power is good for the environment? What made you think I'll say such a thing? Fact is, they could cause all sorts of trouble, from spoiling the scenery to disrupting wind patterns in undesirable ways. Conservation of energy is always applicable as far as physics can knows, so power form the wind is NOT free.
Solar power? Hmmm, Unreliable, inefficient (best cells typically used are just over 10% efficient!) and HIDEOUSLY expensive. Solution? Not until solar cell efficency goes WAY up. Could take quite a while...
Besides, those reflective surfaces could cause major problems for types that use concave reflectors to concentrate liht onto a tube of fluid...
Geothermal, a great idea if you live in say, Iceland? Your not going to cause much extra change. It's just the use of heat that the earth already spews out itself. Reliable too, since the earths core won't cool down any soon...
All this based on engineering/scientific literature, personal experience of working with them and field expereince from field experiments and real life users.
Anyway, gotta go for now. Work, work, work...
I'm not saying gears change power levels. I'm saying narrow power bands need tight ratios to keep them in their usable rpm range. Maybe tristan is simply too mentally lazy to think about what I mean...
With wide powerbands, you can achieve similiar or superior overall performance with less gears. This is very obvious on the exits of tight turns. No need to shift so often and loose time to gearsifts.
I was just saying for a given peak power, wider powerband is superior overall, irrspective of engine type. BTW, most quantify the width of a powerband via absolute rpm numbers alone. This is VERY wrong.
Lets say a 7000rpm redline engine has a 3000rpm powerband (4000-7000rpm). An engine with a 5000 rpm redline has a 2800rpm powerband (2000-4800rpm), peak power at say 4600rpm and peak torque at 2000rpm, all the while keeping a relatively flat torque curve. Given they both produce the same peak power, the 2nd unit actually has a superiory powerband. Why? Because a larger proportion of the usable revs (idle to redline, assuming both engines have enough torque to idle of in a smooth start) is usable for good acceleration. The 2nd unit could also make do with say 5 instead of the other's 6 gears and still perform similiarly or even better. Of course, I'm saying this is true for all engine types, though tristan might just come up with some wild excuse or assumption just to try to piss off someone he doesn't personally like. And of course, this is rather simplistic, though of course to really understand this needs numerical and graphical data.
This all assumes that aall else is closely matched, of course. Or tristan is again too mnetally lazy to deduce such an obvious assumption.
Multitasking a "new" buzzword? Wow, didn't know that. That word has existed since computer geeks and the idea of concurrency in computers existed, so how?!? If I'm just another join anything new bandwagon guy, then why do hate Windows vitsa so much? It's new, right? Well, it's basically nothing more than a resource hog with no real benefit to date, that's why. I tried and found nothing particluar good about it. Does a great job of turning your multicore Ferrari into a stegosaurus. Again, tristan and his fanboy accusations...
I'll let you in on something about me. I used to be somewhat like you, believing RWD and petrol engines are the only way to go for race and general perfomane applications. Petrol engines eem the best not because they are truely fundamnetally superior to all other enigines. It's the result of having enjoyed a seriusly overprivaledged level of development. The more one delves into technological history and scinece, the more apparent it gets. Remmeber flame, ignition, killer exhaust fumes that spew out sulphur clouds, etc? Then again, tristan might not be a student of technological history...
But when alternatives are allowed to develop as well as that particular narrow category of vehicles, any reasonable and logical person is forced to reevaluate things. There's more than one way to achieve a given requirement.
Wind power is good for the environment? What made you think I'll say such a thing? Fact is, they could cause all sorts of trouble, from spoiling the scenery to disrupting wind patterns in undesirable ways. Conservation of energy is always applicable as far as physics can knows, so power form the wind is NOT free.
Solar power? Hmmm, Unreliable, inefficient (best cells typically used are just over 10% efficient!) and HIDEOUSLY expensive. Solution? Not until solar cell efficency goes WAY up. Could take quite a while...
Besides, those reflective surfaces could cause major problems for types that use concave reflectors to concentrate liht onto a tube of fluid...
Geothermal, a great idea if you live in say, Iceland? Your not going to cause much extra change. It's just the use of heat that the earth already spews out itself. Reliable too, since the earths core won't cool down any soon...
All this based on engineering/scientific literature, personal experience of working with them and field expereince from field experiments and real life users.
Anyway, gotta go for now. Work, work, work...