LOL... Are you sure you bought a car? muhahah.. he is asking the cc of your engine.. I was thinking about asking the same question, I just bought a peugeot 307 1.6 XT.. I bought it with 17" wheels which, I guess, will drop the power of the car due to friction. I don't know if I am right, but in that case what kind of simple tuning can I do on the engine to restore the performance of the car? I was thinking air intakes but I have no idea about tuning..
> I was thinking about asking the same question, I just
> bought a peugeot 307 1.6 XT.. I bought it with 17" wheels which, I
> guess, will drop the power of the car due to friction.
Not really - the rolling riction of the wheels is tiny unless they are
grossly underinflated. It also depends critically on the rubber compound
used, and it is quite possible that the rolling resistance is lower than it
was originally.
If the new wheels & tyres were selected properly then the rolling radius of
the new wheels should be the same as the original ones. If this isn't the
case, and the rolling radius has been increased, then the effective gear
ratio of the car will also be increased, which gives a reduction in in-gear
acceleration.
> I don't know if I am right, but in that case what kind of simple tuning
> can I do on the engine to restore the performance of the car? I was
> thinking air intakes but I have no idea about tuning..
Intake/exhaust modifications can only make a difference if the original
items are restrictive, and even then the difference is in the upper-most
region of the rev range. You might be able to extract ~3 or 4 Hp extra,
but you won't notice it. The only real justification for these mods is
that you want a nicer noise.
Jens Kr. Kirkeb? - 09 Feb 2004 17:45 GMT
>> I was thinking about asking the same question, I just
>> bought a peugeot 307 1.6 XT.. I bought it with 17" wheels which, I
>> guess, will drop the power of the car due to friction.
>Not really - the rolling riction of the wheels is tiny unless they are
>grossly underinflated. It also depends critically on the rubber compound
>used, and it is quite possible that the rolling resistance is lower than it
>was originally.
Larger rims are heavier. More rotating mass = slower acceleration.
Andrew Kirby - 10 Feb 2004 12:05 GMT
>>> I was thinking about asking the same question, I just
>>> bought a peugeot 307 1.6 XT.. I bought it with 17" wheels which, I
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>
> Larger rims are heavier. More rotating mass = slower acceleration.
Larger moment of inertia = slower acceleration, yes, although moment of
inertia is not simply related to mass, so you can't assume that heavier
wheels are worse for this.
Also, this is a _tiny_ effect - the fraction of torque at the wheels which
is required to accelerate the wheels themselves is miniscule. You can
demonstrate that by jacking the front of the car up, selecting a gear and
flooring the accelerator - the speed increases _much_ more quickly than
doing the same thing when driving on the road.