I'm getting old and forgetting stuff

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Most of the forums i've read reccomend Schumacer (Spelling) engine mounts.MilesnMiles wrote:Pete, yer right, drivers side engine mount does need some modification. My 360 came with its own mounts and they bolted straight up with one spacer (homemade) being required.
I'm getting old and forgetting stuff
DaveBishop wrote:Dave81 wroteThat's only if you are going from small block to big block in an A bodyMost of the forums i've read reccomend Schumacer (Spelling) engine mounts.
Pete wrote:The Block is different.......
On the contrary Dave mate, I have a good understanding of how Engines make power and what Torque and Horse power are. I was just stating the age old argument about the 2 EnginesDave wrote:You seem to be totally mistaken about how an engine makes power and what torque and Horsepower are.Carl wrote:The great 340 360 debateshort strike bigger bore more HP. Smaller bore, longer stroke more torque.
Torque is the power an engine makes. Period.
Horsepower is just a way of describing torque in relation to RPM.
The camshaft dictates at what RPM you make torque. NOT the stroke of the engine.
If you make torque at high RPM is is more usable for speed if you have gears. Make torque at low rpm and you need fewer gears but top speed is limited.
Traditionally a low rpm designed engine would be given a long stroke in order to give the piston a higher speed and increase the vacuum signal to the carb.
A high rpm engine already has the high piston speed and so you use a short stroke so that the piston speed is not excessive.
Stroker engines play off higher piston speeds against the gains of having a greater capacity (more air/fuel = more power) but actually work better with single plane intakes and big carbs.
Here endith the lesson.![]()
Horsepower is just a way of describing torque in relation to RPM.
The camshaft dictates at what RPM you make torque. NOT the stroke of the engine.
My point was:Carl wrote:On the contrary Dave mate, I have a good understanding of how Engines make power and what Torque and Horse power are. I was just stating the age old argument about the 2 Engines
But that only happens by virtue of the calulation and how much work James Watt thought a horse could do. (lifting a 550lb weight one foot in one second?) HP is not "real". You cannot measure it directly. It is just a figure.But there is a trade off of the 2 at 5,252 RPM where the Torque and HP are equal, below that figure the Engine produces more Torque less HP, above the figure more HP and the Torque trails off. Hence F1 cars rev to over 18000 RPM.