What Is Torque?

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Torque is the force that helps the vehicle start moving from a stop and pulls it up steep hills. Torque steps in again to provide power when you're hauling items or towing something behind the vehicle.
 
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You got that from wikipedia, didn't you? Can you tell me in your own words what torque is?
 
Torque is the force that helps the vehicle start moving from a stop and pulls it up steep hills. Torque steps in again to provide power when you're hauling items or towing something behind the vehicle.

So it's a force? And what unit is it measured in?
 
Newton meters (Nm) to the real world and foot-pounds (ft-lb) in imperial.
 
i have a question, whats the difference between horsepower and torque? A car with more torque accelerates faster and with more force correct? What would happen if 2 cars had the same horsepower but 1 with more torque, and 2 with the same torque and 1 with more horsepower.
 
So it's a force? And what unit is it measured in?

Foot/pounds or Meter/kilograms for those using metric I believe.

As to the first question its a way to measure an engines ability to transmit its energy in a usable manner to produce thrust. Larger amounts of torque enable a lighter vehicle to turn that energy into greater acceleration as long as the vehicle is properly geared and the tires can maintain traction. Once the initial inertia of the vehicle is overcome it becomes much less important and the horsepower becomes more important.
 
Torque is basically the pulling power of the engine. When the torque curve levels off, at that rpm you are getting most acceleration from the engine.
 
Machine torque

Torque is part of the basic specification of an engine: the power output of an engine is expressed as its torque multiplied by its rotational speed of the axis. Internal-combustion engines produce useful torque only over a limited range of rotational speeds (typically from around 1,000–6,000 rpm for a small car). The varying torque output over that range can be measured with a dynamometer, and shown as a torque curve. The peak of that torque curve occurs somewhat below the overall power peak. The torque peak cannot, by definition, appear at higher rpm than the power peak.
Understanding the relationship between torque, power and engine speed is vital in automotive engineering, concerned as it is with transmitting power from the engine through the drive train to the wheels. Power is a function of torque and engine speed. The gearing of the drive train must be chosen appropriately to make the most of the motor's torque characteristics. Power at the drive wheels is equal to engine power less mechanical losses regardless of any gearing between the engine and drive wheels.
Steam engines and electric motors tend to produce maximum torque close to zero rpm, with the torque diminishing as rotational speed rises (due to increasing friction and other constraints). Reciprocating steam engines can start heavy loads from zero RPM without a clutch.
 
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