How much power is reqd to maintain an Insight at 30mph on the flat in good calm conditions? BHP? KW?
Assume tyres at say 50psi.
Any offers?
Assume tyres at say 50psi.
Any offers?
But should it go down under lean burn? Think about it: say you're going down a level road at constant speed, and by wiggling the accelerator a tiny bit can go into or out of lean burn without your speed changing much at all. That says the engine must be producing the same horsepower in either state. It's just using less fuel to produce that power when it's in lean burn.The HP does not go down during lean burn, so only trust the numbers under regular burn conditions. -John
I don't see how it would be possible given the ICE setup for the HP to do anything but go down during lean burn.gpsman1 said:I'm sure it does something like that and I have used this in 4 different models of car, and I would say it is very close to actual. The HP does not go down during lean burn, so only trust the numbers under regular burn conditions. -John
A dyno does not have wind resistance.Mike Dabrowski 2000 said:Thats why they test cars on a dyno.
Yes James. Lean burn gives you SIGNIFICANTLY LESS POWER. It sounds like you have not driven a MT Insight with lean burn. This would be blantently obvious otherwise. Once the engine is to normal temp, and you are into normal cruise mode, lean burn = 25% to 30% less power and, not by coincidence, 30% less fuel is used. It may not be an exact 1:1 ratio for power to fuel use, but it's pretty darn close. If you run rich, you do not get more power because you waste fuel out the tailpipe. Running rich is like taking two Vitamin pills a day. You just piss one away. But running lean FOR SURE has a proportional loss in power. ( taking half a vitamin pill when you need a full one )james said:"The lean burn is really, like a 6th gear on the car.
Since there is no 6th gear to lower RPM, (which would in turn lower fuel used per minute) the car lowers fuel used per minute without lower RPM by changing the ratio. It's a clever trick to get less power, without adding heavy ( and costly ) extra gears."
Not at all. When the Insight engine goes into lean burn, it's developing exactly (well, pretty close to) the same amount of power, just using much less gasoline to do so. If it wasn't developing the same amount of power, you'd see a noticable speed drop on going into lean burn. Instead, the only change is to the instantaneous mpg display![]()
But a Dyno will give the actual exact HP output of the Engine... if you are reading it with the SG at the same time you can see the difference.gpsman1 said:A dyno does not have wind resistance.
I'll take that bet :badgrin:gpsman1 said:I'd be willing to bet a tank of gas that the SG is within 10% of real on the HP reading.