Diesel guys are number guys whether they know it or not. You’ll see the Big Three touting numbers in all of their ad campaigns: best in class towing, most torque, highest horsepower. In a day of little turbo economy cars, diesel numbers are almost always big. For many aftermarket enthusiasts, 500 rear-wheel horsepower and 1,000lb-ft of torque is sort of the starting performance benchmark. Whether you’re good at math or not, numbers infiltrate virtually every aspect of the diesel market, so let’s have a look at them! We promise to try and keep it basic.
ENGINE DISPLACEMENT
Almost all of the diesel engines we work within the performance industry are large, but if there’s a displacement you can’t place (or you’re talking to an old hot rod guy) you can mix liters and cubic inches by taking the size in cubic centimeters (5.9L for instance = 5900cc) and dividing it by 16.38. This gives us 360.2 cubic inches. That means an 8.3L (8300cc) is 506 cid, and a 1.9L TDI is a tiny 116 cubic inches. It may be off by a decimal place or two, but the cubic inch to cubic centimeter can be helpful in everything from calculating airflow to sizing turbos, since most American hot rod math is non-metric.
AIRFLOW
This story is from the December 2020 edition of Diesel World.
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This story is from the December 2020 edition of Diesel World.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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