Now that I look at it, my math is wrong for a few reasons, main one being I used the wrong FDR for the comparison Tranny math sucks!
So correct me if Im wrong, but as I understand it, as long as the ammount of force remains the same, torque is multiplied by a gear ratio and RPM is always divided by a gear ratio.
So, I assume your torque #s to the axles should grow, but the RPM at which the axles rotate at any given engine (or in this case driveshaft) RPM will proportionally lower (why you will now redline and have to shift at a lower MPH)
When I say mechanical torque I am refering to torque created by manipulating the energies an engine makes, not torque that is created by ADDING to the energies an engine makes.
So correct me if Im wrong, but as I understand it, as long as the ammount of force remains the same, torque is multiplied by a gear ratio and RPM is always divided by a gear ratio.
So, I assume your torque #s to the axles should grow, but the RPM at which the axles rotate at any given engine (or in this case driveshaft) RPM will proportionally lower (why you will now redline and have to shift at a lower MPH)
When I say mechanical torque I am refering to torque created by manipulating the energies an engine makes, not torque that is created by ADDING to the energies an engine makes.
Comment