![]() 06/11/2020 at 11:07 • Filed to: Hybrid, hybrids, torque | ![]() | ![]() |
I checked online couldn’t find anything concrete. Very few manufacturers state the torque. I think the Malibu has official numbers from Chevy for total torque. Acura has this for its RLX Hybrid with the following disclaimer- “Horsepower and torque figures includes the maximum power of the engine and all motors combined that can be produced at any one time. Not SAE net.”
I have seen mostly total system HP but not torque
I know that electric and gas engines make torque at different RPMs so how would you calculate total torque in this instance? Case in point the new Sonata-
2.0L Inline 4 cylinder-
150 hp @ 6,000 rpm
139 lbft. torque @ 5,000
Electric Motor-
Power Output 39 kW (51 HP) @ 1,800–2,300 rpm
Torque Output 151 lb.ft. @ 01,800 rpm
Combined Horsepower 192 hp
Combined Torque?
![]() 06/11/2020 at 11:07 |
|
Ver
y
easy way actually.
Stick the thing on a dyno and measure it.
![]() 06/11/2020 at 11:09 |
|
Manufacturers Dyno test their vehicles I assume? Why don’t they release total torque numbers and only total HP?
![]() 06/11/2020 at 11:13 |
|
to make themselves look good.
bike manufactures almost NEVER release the HP or torque numbers at all. You have to search hard to find them
![]() 06/11/2020 at 11:14 |
|
Because at least for most of the uneducated populace HP is synonymous with power and that is all that matters for sales paraphernalia.
![]() 06/11/2020 at 11:15 |
|
You could do a very simplistic estimation using the assumption that the torque curve is flat on an electric motor
It would literally be additive to the gas engine torque curve then. Granted this is not going to be representative of reality without knowing the actual torque curve which is going to look something more like this
And we don’t know if engineers de-rate the electric motor so it doesn’t break anything in the transmission either.
![]() 06/11/2020 at 11:21 |
|
Model s is single speed 9.73:1
![]() 06/11/2020 at 11:24 |
|
I know, but I believe the electric motor torque curve would still look something more like this. Though it would have steps for each gear on a graph based on vehicle speed like this one . I am not an electrical engineer though, so take this with a grain of salt.
![]() 06/11/2020 at 11:28 |
|
You can calculate such things for a hybrid, but you need a lot more info, and the calculation will be a bit different in method based on the hybrid drivetrain layout.
![]() 06/11/2020 at 11:29 |
|
![]() 06/11/2020 at 18:28 |
|
It can be estimated with those data points to develop the torque values of both the engine and the motor respective torque curves at given rpms. You’d do a rudimentary mock dynonplot with bhp=tq X @rpm / 5252 and line up the data points you can with peak torque motor, peak hp motor, peak torque engine, peak hp engine and and educated solving of peak combined HP (an rpm would be more helpful but likely near peak engine hp just based on the performance of both engine and motor)
The peak value is where both both engine and motor combined together produce the highest torque value (it will also give you the engine rpm that occurs).
It won’t be 100% precise or accurate but you can ballpark it to be decently close.