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1ltr car vs 1ltr bike engines

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rac3r
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PostPosted: 22:20 - 05 Nov 2014    Post subject: 1ltr car vs 1ltr bike engines Reply with quote

Stupid question but why do car engines produce so little power compared to the equivelant bike engine?

Eg my 1.4 car produces 95bhp whereas my 636 produces the same if not more!
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Irezumi aka Reuben
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PostPosted: 22:22 - 05 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Your bike has to shift around 350kg give or take a bit, your car 1500+kg give or take a bit.
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P.addy
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PostPosted: 22:25 - 05 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Your bike can rev to 13k, your car revs to 6k.

Horses for courses, bikes are built that way, cars are for transporting shit. Laughing
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hmmmnz
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PostPosted: 22:28 - 05 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

the little 3 cylinder focus ecoboost 1 litre motor makes 125hp
which aint bad, my 850 tdm only makes 60hp odd,

a car motor is tuned to provide power and torque at lower rpms,
and to provide reliability,

you'd struggle to keep a 1000cc 200hp engine reliable for 100k+ miles
with no major work, especially if it was constantly hauling 850-1500kgs around all the time
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Last edited by hmmmnz on 22:29 - 05 Nov 2014; edited 1 time in total
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Knacker
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PostPosted: 22:29 - 05 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

My 4.7 V8 Produces a mind boggling 235bhp which is pretty pathetic considering your 1.4 makes 95bhp.

It's a bit like asking why a RS125 makes XXbhp and my GS125 makes 11bhp.
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mattyfattyboo...
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PostPosted: 22:35 - 05 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Different purposes for each motor.

Last edited by mattyfattyboomboom on 22:36 - 05 Nov 2014; edited 3 times in total
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Tungtvann
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PostPosted: 22:35 - 05 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Cars have a lot more torque too, producing the power at lower revs, making them easier to drive and actually pull the weight of a car. Sticking an equivalent HP motorbike engine into a car, say a GSXR600 engine into a 1.4 Ford Fiesta probably wouldn't make it that good to drive!
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G
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PostPosted: 22:45 - 05 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

hmmmnz wrote:
the little 3 cylinder focus ecoboost 1 litre motor makes 125hp
which aint bad,

Indeed - Thunderace kinda power. Of course, with a turbo and no doubt chunkier internals to cope and keep it reliable.
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rac3r
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PostPosted: 23:45 - 05 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

My car (Mito) they do the same engine but with a turbo in 155hp form. Also a slightly different 1.4 Turbo in 170hp form!
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arry
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PostPosted: 23:53 - 05 Nov 2014    Post subject: Re: 1ltr car vs 1ltr bike engines Reply with quote

rac3r wrote:
Stupid question but why do car engines produce so little power compared to the equivelant bike engine?

Eg my 1.4 car produces 95bhp whereas my 636 produces the same if not more!


Lessed stressed, more tightly emissions controlled. A 6,000 mile service interval would go down none too well when selling a car; that's 3 months and a service required. Most bikes would do the year time interval rather than the mileage.
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Kickstart
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PostPosted: 00:45 - 06 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hi

More revs, and as power is torque x rpm that is how to make power.

But a higher revving engine is likely to be more highly stressed (and shorted lived) and have a bigger difference between low down rpm torque and top end rpm torque. More weight for the car means more torque needed at low rpm to move off, which without very low gearing makes limited torque at low rpm less useful.

All the best

Keith
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stevo as b4
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PostPosted: 01:18 - 06 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

As Keith said really.

Car manufacturers cannot afford the build costs (both materials specs and tolerances) of a 1.0L motor that revs high enough to make 100+ bhp as a primary reason, let alone the reduced service intervals, and shorter lifespan.

Revs are always expensive, Forced induction can be cheap to a point until you go too far and then it gets suddenly and catastrophically expensive! Laughing
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Llama-Farmer
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PostPosted: 02:50 - 06 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Modern bike engines are built to much finer tolerances, with much higher specific power output. But they don't have to lug around a tonne and a half of metal.


Car engines do have to drag that extra weight, and they will usually clock up more miles than a bike engine, and generally taken less care of than a bike engine.




So car engines are built to provide much more torque than bikes, otherwise they wouldn't go anywhere.

Look at the kind of power n/a formula one engines were producing from 2.4(?) V8s. But they had to be in the right gear at the right time. This years F1 engines are turbocharged and they can be in one of several gears and they'll just pull and pull, or spin.
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arry
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PostPosted: 08:19 - 06 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

stevo as b4 wrote:

Car manufacturers cannot afford the build costs (both materials specs and tolerances) of a 1.0L motor that revs high enough to make 100+ bhp as a primary reason, let alone the reduced service intervals, and shorter lifespan.


With that said, Honda's B18 DC2 engine is considered pretty much reliable and abusable at circa 190bhp from 1800cc, revving to 8,000+ rpm, without mentally low service intervals. BHP per CC specific output of ~105bhp per litre from 1995. Bugger all torque though.
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weasley
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PostPosted: 08:27 - 06 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Llama-Farmer wrote:

Look at the kind of power n/a formula one engines were producing from 2.4(?) V8s. But they had to be in the right gear at the right time. This years F1 engines are turbocharged and they can be in one of several gears and they'll just pull and pull, or spin.


But that torque is boosted significantly by the electric motors.
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weasley
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PostPosted: 08:30 - 06 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

stevo as b4 wrote:
As Keith said really.

Car manufacturers cannot afford the build costs (both materials specs and tolerances) of a 1.0L motor that revs high enough to make 100+ bhp as a primary reason, let alone the reduced service intervals, and shorter lifespan.

Revs are always expensive, Forced induction can be cheap to a point until you go too far and then it gets suddenly and catastrophically expensive! Laughing


Ford make a 1 litre engine putting out 125 bhp. And as arry said, Honda have been doing 100 bhp/litre nat-asp engines since 1989 with famous reliability.

Keith has pointed out the main aspect of this... essentially torque vs power and the relationship to revs.
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Llama-Farmer
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PostPosted: 09:44 - 06 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

weasley wrote:
Llama-Farmer wrote:

Look at the kind of power n/a formula one engines were producing from 2.4(?) V8s. But they had to be in the right gear at the right time. This years F1 engines are turbocharged and they can be in one of several gears and they'll just pull and pull, or spin.


But that torque is boosted significantly by the electric motors.


True. But stick a turbo on an n/a engine and the torque is increased a lot.

The ERS in F1 just adds to it.
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esullivan
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PostPosted: 10:12 - 06 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

The NC, which I ride, is an interesting example of mixing the two. It's a motorcycle with a car-like engine. Although it's apparently not "half a Honda Jazz engine" as rumoured, it uses similar technology and has a similar rev limit (6.5K).

It was a controversial, but relatively successful (judging from sales) experiment by Honda. It gives the NC good fuel economy, decent torque and long service intervals, but at the expense of top-end power. I wouldn't be surprised if other manufacturers try something similar. Suzuki has cars that it could borrow from, for example.

Back in the 1980s, I used a car called the Chevy Sprint (it went by various other names, I think Geo Metro here). It apparently used an engine with motorcycle tech in it. It was like driving a golf cart. I used to say that I needed to turn the radio down to go up steep hills, but I was only half joking. Great mileage, though. 60mpg (American mpg), very easily.
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P.addy
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PostPosted: 10:28 - 06 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

esullivan wrote:
I wouldn't be surprised if other manufacturers try something similar. Suzuki has cars that it could borrow from, for example.


Suzuki have been taking engines from tractors for a while. SV650 is a notable example.
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Kickstart
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PostPosted: 21:45 - 06 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

esullivan wrote:
The NC, which I ride, is an interesting example of mixing the two. It's a motorcycle with a car-like engine. Although it's apparently not "half a Honda Jazz engine" as rumoured, it uses similar technology and has a similar rev limit (6.5K).


Honda tried the same kind of idea in the late 1980s with the PC800 Pacific Coast. A bike designed to appeal to car drivers (mainly aimed at the US market with somewhat more relaxed licensing laws).

It was a pretty major failure.

Personally I would prefer a bike style engine in a car!

All the best

Keith
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0l0dom0l0
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PostPosted: 23:26 - 06 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Ford have also just released a new version of the 1.0l ecoboost which produces 140PS. Not bad really!
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TallPaul_S
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PostPosted: 23:55 - 06 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Torque.

That 138bhp ecoboost engine has 155lb/ft of torque.

The S1000R has 160bhp but only 83lb/ft of torque. Even a Monster 1200S doesn't have much more torque (145bhp and 92lb/ft of torque)

An engine that doesn't need to built for torque can be built for power.

Stick that 1.0 ecoboost engine in a bike and the front tyre would last a lifetime Laughing
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Kickstart
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PostPosted: 23:58 - 06 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

TallPaul_S wrote:

An engine that doesn't need to built for torque can be built for power.


An engine that doesn't rev needs higher gearing, and engine torque to rescue some of the torque at the wheels lost from having that high gearing.

All the best

Keith
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talkToTheHat
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PostPosted: 03:53 - 07 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Note that power = torque * RPM

Further note that hardly drivablesons and similar also have engines that produce peak torque at very low rpm.

An engine that has a reasonably wide and flat torque curve is easy and forgiving to drive, one with a steep curve that peaks briefly at high revs will probably be a whole lot more fun.

Domestic and comercial car and van engines are designed to be forgotten about for as long as possible, and owned by people who can't change a brake light or check a fluid level. Minimal maintenance.

Performance vehicles have shorter service intervals. Track vehicles this is often a handful of hours. A motorcycle is by default a performance vehicle, a 10hp 125 will spend its entire life with the throttle pinned screaming for mercy until the vehicle isncreashed beyond repair. On a sportrsbike every gram of excess weight has been trimmed and the engine is in a high state of tune.

If even the relatively unsophisticated twin in my nail was swapped into my mother's polo, she'd either kill it in months, or lose the plot at the among of valve clearance and carb balace checks that area on the service schedule. I think she checks her tyre pressures about as often, and even that is a major hastle.

How many cagers have never taken their vehicle into the second half of the rev range?
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Albigularis
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PostPosted: 04:50 - 07 Nov 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

talkToTheHat wrote:
How many cagers have never taken their vehicle into the second half of the rev range?


Probably less than you think, ever watched a woman reverse park?
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