trueforensics
Mechanical
- Oct 5, 2006
- 7
I'm trying to calculate the drive wheel tangential output force of a car and ran into some trouble.
Here is the situation. The car is basically locked into place (ie: tires strapped down). I know the horsepower, the drive wheel torque of the car, and the weight on each wheel. I'm trying to figure out how large of a tengential force the tire could possible put out(to the ground). My first instinct was to simply multiply the maximum drive wheel torque by the radius of the tire to get the output force. But, that turned out to be:
185ft-lbs / 1 ft = 185 lbs. Which seems much too low.
Any advice is greatly appreciated. Thanks.
Here is the situation. The car is basically locked into place (ie: tires strapped down). I know the horsepower, the drive wheel torque of the car, and the weight on each wheel. I'm trying to figure out how large of a tengential force the tire could possible put out(to the ground). My first instinct was to simply multiply the maximum drive wheel torque by the radius of the tire to get the output force. But, that turned out to be:
185ft-lbs / 1 ft = 185 lbs. Which seems much too low.
Any advice is greatly appreciated. Thanks.