Buck
Storage? I am Storage!
I know, and that is 1000 brake horsepower, not some phoney measurement done at the flywheel.
Fortunately all the input figures are contained in the link to the Bugatti article. Several have to be converted from metric however.The general calculation for cylinder horsepower is: nxPLAN/33,000
n is the number of power cylinders
x is the number of power strokes in the cylinder per revolution (examples: double acting steam x=2, single acting steam or 2 cycle x=1, 4 cycle x=.5 or 1/2)
P is average cylinder pressure (examples: for steam assume 1/2 the boiler pressure, many early gasoline engines used an assumed 75 psi)
L is the length of the stroke in FEET (example: an 8" stroke would be .667, or 2/3, a 12" stroke would be 1)
A is the area of the piston being acted upon in square inches (the entire face, PLUS in double acting engines, the back side minus the area of the rod)
N is the number of revolutions per minute
multiply all those together and devide that number by 33,000.
Coefficient of drag: 0.26 <----------------------------------------------------------------- !!!
Yes, the multiple turbos are to counteract lag. The Volkswagen 1.8 liter 4-cylinder has two turbos for that same reason.
Anyone have an idea why four turbos are needed on that Bugatti? Surely two larger ones would have worked as well with half the moving parts. Space issue maybe?
Only when the cows eat chili the night before.It seems methane burns with little or no waste gases.
mubs said:Apparently Sweden has been quite successful in extracting and purifying methane from manure, sewage, salughterhouses, what have you. This methane is then liquified and pumped around just like natural gas. Volvo it seems has several models there that are bi-fuel; just flick a switch.
Mercutio said:Chicken farms are a billion times worse. I'm not kidding. Until age 14 I lived in Central Illinois farm country. Cow crap you get used to. Pig crap you get used to. Chicken farms from 1/2 mile away smell worse than being sprayed by a skunk.
I read over the weekend that Toyota's hybrid technology will be migrated into their Highlander crossover/SUV (and the Lexus RX) over the next couple of years, enabling it to get 35-40MPG. While I'm no fan of Toyotas in general and the Highlander specifically, this is a good move to see as it may encourage other manufacturers to follow suit.Fushigi said:I'd like an SUV or a minivan but won't commit until hybrids are out or some other technology is introduced to raise their efficiency.
First of all, I've very glad no one had any injuries worth noting. The worst aspect of any accident is what can happen to the vehicle occupants.CraigLC said:Well I seem to have proven my own case....unfortunately.
IMO, you proved the opposite. The weight of your vehicule almost certainly caused the accident. Would you have driven a car, you would have been able to stop in time or at least more than you did and therefore caused less damages to the Jag. Bottom line : your SUV was overall more dangerous than a car on the road.CraigLC said:Well I seem to have proven my own case....unfortunately.
Fushigi said:But if your Jimmy had been equipped with antilock brakes, the accident may have been avoided altogether as you would have stopped in a shorter distance while maintaining steering control
Handruin said:We all seem to stereotype the SUV and truck, but what it boils down to is weight.
NRG = mc² said:Does it??Yes, the multiple turbos are to counteract lag. The Volkswagen 1.8 liter 4-cylinder has two turbos for that same reason.
Handruin said:Coug, what would you (or anyone reading this) consider a reasonable weight for a vehicle, regardless of type? (SUV, Truck, car…etc) We all seem to stereotype the SUV and truck, but what it boils down to is weight.
CougTek said:IMO, you proved the opposite. The weight of your vehicule almost certainly caused the accident. Would you have driven a car, you would have been able to stop in time or at least more than you did and therefore caused less damages to the Jag. Bottom line : your SUV was overall more dangerous than a car on the road.CraigLC said:Well I seem to have proven my own case....unfortunately.
The two road exits I had in my life would have been much worst if I would have had a truck. Both times I slipped out of the road and the reason I didn't tumbled twice was because of the low gravity center of my vehicule.
I think JTR once wrote that SUV drivers only care about their personal security and not to the amount of damage they cause to others. Reading how you seem proud of the low damages your Jimmy had in comparison to those of the Jag, well it kinda prove his point.
If you don''t believe that a car could have prevented this whole accident from happening, just measure the braking distance of your Jimmy at the speed you were going at the moment of the accident and compare it to the one of your mustang. Then think about how much your wallet would have been proud.
I don't mean to offend you, just to make you realise that your beloved thanks isn't as safe as you think it is. If not for you, then maybe for others.
Is it a question of the braking system not adapted to the type of vehicule or something that has to do with the height of the vehicule (most of the weight during braking being above the wheels rather than being the wheels), I'm not sure. What's obvious though is that an old SUV sucks at braking on paved road compared to a car.
There are cars that are stupidly heavy IMO, like the newest Bentley. I mean, 5000lbs for a 4 passengers, come on (I don't know if it's really a 4 passengers, but I wouldn't see 7 persons into one of those car for sure).
That doesn't sound like an opinion. The hidden meaning of the above was, IMO, that you wanted to show what happened in your accident to prove that you were safer in your SUV than you would have been in a car. I simply argue that it isn't true, at least according to me and to the facts I've seen before (stats, reports, etc).CraigLC said:Well I seem to have proven my own case....unfortunately.
Pradeep said:Apparently it's going to be a pretty bad winter in Upstate NY, so I got some snow tires put on last week. Will be interesting to see the difference once the snow starts coming down.
CraigLC said:I still think most compacts and even some mid size cars are tin cans. My 2000 Trans Am is about 80 percent plastic as far as body panels go... great dent resistance though
Weight of things like body panels has been reduced likely to compansate for all the related crap they put in the cars now...power everything...gadgets etc.
One other thing... I could agree to a weight restriction...my truck would definitely fall as less then 4000 lbs and as for height...its lower then most trucks I see... its stock but it wasn't a jacked up truck originally. I did hit the jag on the topside of the rear bumper which is likely most of the reason for the damage to the rear panel.
e_dawg said:And yourself, how is life in Turku? Have a snack at Aschan for me after you finish shopping at Hansa...