Alan,
The engineering/physics definition of Torque is Force x Radius, so if you put a 1 foot long ring spanner on a horizontal nut so that the spanner is horizontal, then hang a 1lb bag of sugar from the other end of the spanner you're applying 1lb/ft of torque to the nut if you ignore the weight of the spanner itself. If you hang two bags of sugar, or make the spanner twice as long you've got 2lb/ft. If you make the spanner twice as long AND hang two bags of sugar you've got 4 lb/ft and so on.
Simply put, it's the engine's ability to twist the gearbox shaft.
Power (whether Horsepower, Kilowatts, or whatever) is how quickly the engine can turn the shaft with that torque, so immediately we can see that the peak BHP figure needs to involve an RPM somewhere high up the range. If peak BHP occurs some distance from the red line, then it implies that the torque falls off rapidly at higher RPM.
JJ and a big fat bloke can probably perform the same bicep curl once. Because JJ lives in the gym and only eats chickens though, he could get through 100 repetitions quicker than the fat bloke, so JJ would be more "powerful" even though their peak "torque" was the same.
The engineering/physics definition of Torque is Force x Radius, so if you put a 1 foot long ring spanner on a horizontal nut so that the spanner is horizontal, then hang a 1lb bag of sugar from the other end of the spanner you're applying 1lb/ft of torque to the nut if you ignore the weight of the spanner itself. If you hang two bags of sugar, or make the spanner twice as long you've got 2lb/ft. If you make the spanner twice as long AND hang two bags of sugar you've got 4 lb/ft and so on.
Simply put, it's the engine's ability to twist the gearbox shaft.
Power (whether Horsepower, Kilowatts, or whatever) is how quickly the engine can turn the shaft with that torque, so immediately we can see that the peak BHP figure needs to involve an RPM somewhere high up the range. If peak BHP occurs some distance from the red line, then it implies that the torque falls off rapidly at higher RPM.
JJ and a big fat bloke can probably perform the same bicep curl once. Because JJ lives in the gym and only eats chickens though, he could get through 100 repetitions quicker than the fat bloke, so JJ would be more "powerful" even though their peak "torque" was the same.