EV Advice

What's the difference between power and torque?
By David Morley · 05 Oct 2022
Q: What is the difference between torque and power?A: It’s the age-old question that still baffles many car enthusiasts, but it’s really not that difficult when you break it down. As in: Torque is the force produced by (in cars and trucks) either burning a hydro-carbon fuel in an engine or (increasingly these days) applying an electric current to an electric motor. Power is simply that torque multiplied by engine speed.Fundamentally, then, an engine’s torque is the measure of its muscle and how much it can flex. Power is how fast it can flex it across a given period of time. In a boxer, torque would be how hard he or she could punch; power is how fast they could produce those blows.In the car world, the fundamental difference between horsepower and torque is that torque is real. Power, meantime, is the theoretical result of a mathematical equation that amounts to torque multiplied by revolution speed.Want to dig a little deeper? Okay, torque is a twisting (as opposed to linear) force that wants to rotate something. In the case of your car’s engine, that something is the crankshaft. It’s torque that actually makes the car move and accelerate (as that torque is passed from the crankshaft, though the transmission, differential and, finally, the axles).How fast it accelerates is down to power which, again, is a measure of how fast the engine can produce that torque-force moment. (The equation is also referred to as hp vs torque, horsepower vs torque and power vs torque, but it’s the same science.)Think of it a bit like a huge cargo ship. If you want to accelerate it through water, you need an engine that produces massive torque to get all that mass moving and keep it moving. It won’t be fast (relatively) but it will move thousands of tonnes through water which (in a macro sense) is quite sticky and produces a lot of drag. If, on the other hand, you want to go water-skiing, you use a smaller boat that doesn’t require the same force to get it moving, and power it with an engine that produces a lot of power that can move the vessel quickly.Torque vs power in cars is interesting, because it greatly affects the way the car feels to drive. A low-revving engine (like a turbo-diesel) with a lot of torque for its displacement, won’t rev like a petrol engine so it won’t make as much power (even though it can feel muscular because of its torque).The flip-side is a small capacity petrol engine which doesn’t make a whole lot of torque, but revs to 9000rpm, thereby multiplying that modest torque by a huge factor to arrive at a decent horsepower figure.The concepts of torque vs horsepower are no different between conventional petrol engines and electric motors. In both cases, the torque is generated at the crankshaft (or output shaft on a motor) and is then transferred to the wheels. In fact, the theory holds true for whatever power source we’re talking about. Even when you spin a lazy-susan on a table, you’re applying torque (from your arm) to do so. A wind generator? Yep, that wind hitting the blades of the turbine is creating a torque force, too.Actually, the windmill analogy is also a good way to explain how power is dependent on the rate at which that torque is applied. The faster that wind turbine turns, the more power (in this case electricity) it makes. It really is that simple.Getting back to cars, vehicles with lots of torque tend to be relaxed to drive and don’t require either you or the gearbox to work too hard. A car with less torque but lots of power, meantime (a typical arrangement for race-cars) will require more use of the gears to keep the engine spinning fast and producing plenty of horsepower.Where the engine develops its maximum torque also has an effect here. Again, smaller motors that like to rev do so because their torque peak is high in the rev range. That contrasts with an electric motor which can muster its maximum torque at standstill, which is why electric cars feel so frisky as you leave the green light.Having maximum torque at super-low revs is also why EVs don’t (generally) need more than one gear to take them through the whole range of everyday speeds. Contrast that with a 50cc Grand Prix motorcycle form the 1960s and 70s. Obviously, with just 50cc of capacity, these were never going to be torquey engines and what torque they did make was concentrated in a very narrow rev band. So, to keep the engine producing as much torque (and, therefore power) as possible for as much of the time as possible, the makers produced these bikes with no less than 14 gears. The riders were kept busy but amazingly, these tiny engines would propel the machine and rider to speeds of around 180km/h.
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Will Ford's future hot hatches be electric?
By Stephen Ottley · 01 Oct 2022
Ford Australia’s decision to drop the Focus and Fiesta ST hot hatches seemingly brought the carmaker's hot hatch era to a close. But the global head of Ford Performance believes there is still a future for the small performance cars, albeit in electric form.
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Tesla electric cars in Australia: Everything you need to know
By Stephen Corby · 08 Sep 2022
Since strutting onto the global stage 18 years ago, with the not-so-humble aim of becoming both a car manufacturer and a technology company, Tesla, and its high-profile boss Elon Musk, have become as synonymous with electric vehicles as Apple is with smartphones.
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The top 5 reasons to consider an electric car
By Stephen Corby · 07 Sep 2022
The 'electric cars vs petrol cars' debate is a curious one, since there's not really a whole lot to debate: EVs don’t use fossil fuels and thus don't emit the kind of harmful greenhouse gases that make Mother Nature, and her favourite daughter Greta Thunberg, very sad indeed.
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Top 5 facts about electric cars and myths debunked
By Stephen Corby · 31 Aug 2022
Although electric vehicles  seem like they’ve only recently popped up out of nowhere to sneakily infiltrate any motoring-related conversation, they are far from being an overnight sensation, with the development of crude EVs dating all the way back to the mid-19th century. 
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Everything you need to know about hybrid vehicle tax credits and incentives in Australia
By Stephen Corby · 30 Aug 2022
If you want a good example of how government incentives for electric vehicles (EVs) can encourage consumer uptake, then we must turn our attention to the land of Vikings, fjords and men named Bjørn: Norway.  Fuel-reliant internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles are more expensive in Norway, and are subject to a carbon tax, weight tax, and 25 per cent sales tax - approximately 50 per cent tax in
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Honda hybrids in Australia: Everything you need to know
By Stephen Corby · 29 Aug 2022
As one of the world's largest manufacturers of internal-combustion engines (ICE) measured by volume - cranking out a whopping 14 million of them annually - you’d expect that Japanese car manufacturer Honda would be well ahead of the curve in terms of alternate fuel sources, now that traditional engines are slowly but surely being phased out due to environmental concerns. 
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Lexus hybrid cars in Australia: Everything you need to know
By Stephen Corby · 23 Aug 2022
Lexus, the luxury division of Japanese auto giant Toyota, passed the major milestone of having sold two million electrified vehicles - meaning electric vehicles (EVs), hybrids and plug-in hybrid vehicles (PHEVs) - in the first quarter of 2021, a signifier of the brand’s long-term commitment to reducing CO2 emissions and having a more positive environmental impact.
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Best second-hand electric cars in Australia
By Stephen Corby · 23 Aug 2022
It’s been a decade since the Nissan Leaf arrived on Australian roads promising to revolutionise the automotive industry. It was followed shortly after by the Tesla Model S and BMW i3 and now most major car brands either have, or are preparing to launch, their own electric vehicle (EV).
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2023 Mercedes-AMG EQS 53 review
By Tom White · 17 Aug 2022
Selling the future of Mercedes-Benz styling, S-Class luxury, and AMG performance all-in-one is the overwhelming suite of tasks faced by the EQS 53.
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