In an ideal world the power from the engine would go directly toward moving the vehicle. We already saw this was not happening in the engine. Gasoline has a given potential energy per mass, but the power of our engine did not increase purely based on the amount of gasoline burned. A four stroke engine brings in gas every two cycles, so a constant pressure on the gas pedal should release a linear increase of potential energy from the gas. It does do this for all of the gasoline burned, but most of that energy is transformed into things like heat, and heat doesn't move cars.
http://www.rookeye.com//images/efficiency.jpg
This
MIT report gives a good breakdown of where the rest of the energy goes in a 2.5L 2005 Camry. Details on the efficiencies of specific cars are hard to come by, but this benchmark can help us get an idea of what to expect on any car. Loss in the driveline is not a flat line over RPM's, but it is unrealistic to expect a person to find exact numbers on those details. The only force we see here that should dramatically change based on velocity is drag.
P_d = 1/2 \rho V^3 C_d A
Fd = Force of drag
\rho
= density of air
V = velocity
Cd = Drag coefficient
A = cross-sectional area of object
Ex: cd = .34, A = 21.23 ft2, V = 60MPH
.0807 lbs(mass)/ft3 / 2 * 1 lbs(force) / 32.2 lbs(mass) * .34 *
21.23 ft2 * ((60 MPH) * (5280 ft / 3600 s))3 *
1 HP / 550 (ft-lbs(force)/s) = 11.2 HP
Aerodynamic drag has a staggering cubic increase as speed increases. We can't simply take the numbers from the picture above for this number. There are several
Wiki Lists that keep up to date drag coefficients and frontal areas. Even if you can't find the exact car in question, you should be able to make an educated guess from a similar car.
This still leaves the question of how the factors other than drag effect our vehicle when examining power loss from the engine to the road. I don't expect to have the details to be very precise on this measurement. I would like to find a rough average that I can apply at all times. For cars rated for sale in America we have an amazing tool. The end of the
EPA regulations governing MPG tests gives us the exact speeds a vehicle was tested under for a given amount of gas and distance. It also gives us the precise energy per pound in the gasoline burned, and it measures the gas burned by looking at the gasses leaving the exhaust, so we know that we are looking at the energy actually released rather than the energy in the gas leaving the tank. We still have to factor in road load and drag, because the EPA forces them to simulate these forces. We can look at the energy that should have been produced and then separate it out into the energy lost in the engine and overcoming inertia verses the energy lost in everything else.
Let's start with figuring out the energy that should have been produced. Your life is easy if you are looking at a car made before 2008. The test in the earlier link is all that is used with the EPA knocking off an arbitrary 22% from the number. If you have a vehicle with a model after 2008 you are going to have to deal with the much less laboratory accurate MPG that the EPA uses today. The highway efficiency for these later models is a mixture of the old test run once, and the highway segment of the new US06 test run about 6 times with an extremely small adjustment from other tests that would effect the value by less than a 1/10 of a percent. They then give it an arbitrary 7% bonus followed by the old arbitrary 22% docking. On the mixed test, we don't have an actual test time, so the easiest way to work this is to multiply the test figures by their weight. The old test is 765 seconds long. The new segment is 360 seconds long. The old test weighted by 21% and the new one weighted by 79% makes the combined test's time to be 445.04 seconds long. The old test was 10.25 miles long. The new test was 6.25 miles long. This makes the comined test 7.09 miles long
Model Year < 2008:
10.25 Miles / (Fe / .78) * 6.22 lbs(mass) / 1 Gallon * 18478 BTU / 1 lbs(mass) /
765 seconds / 1 hour * 3600 seconds * 1 HP / 2544 (BTU/hr)
Model Year >= 2007:
7.09 Miles / (Fe / .78 / 1.07) / 6.22 lbs(mass) * 1 Gallon *
18478 BTU / 1 lbs(mass) / 765 seconds / 1 hour * 3600 seconds * 1 HP / 2544 (BTU/hr)
Fe = fuel efficiency in miles per gallon Ex. 1990 model 24MPG:
10.25 Miles / (24MPG / .78) * 6.22 lbs(mass) / 1 Gallon * 18478 BTU / 1 lbs(mass) /
765 seconds / 1 hour * 3600 seconds * 1 HP / 2544 (BTU/hr) = 70.8 HP
This obviously seems very low when you compare it to the horsepower of the engine, but you have to remember that this test was not done with the engine running at full throttle the whole time. For a good comparison, let's take a look at the power required to move this vehicle over the distance of the test. For this example we'll say my car's weight with driver is 3627 lbs(mass).
W = F * D = 3627 lbs(mass) * 10.25 miles * 5280 ft / 1 mile * 1 lbs(force) / 32.17 lbs(mass) = 6101748 (ft-lbs)
P = W / t = 6101748 (lbs-ft) / 765 seconds * 1 HP / 550 (ft-lbs/s) = 14.5 HP = 20.4% of gasoline HP
My next job is going to be determining how this power is used. This is already quite a bit, so I'll start on that in the next post.