Why Do Diesel Engines Produce So Much Torque?

Diesel-engined cars normally struggle to compete with their petrol-powered counterparts on the spec sheet, but why are they produce way more torque?
Why Do Diesel Engines Produce So Much Torque?

It’s not a secret that diesel engines consistently produce higher torque outputs than petrol engines. The difference between horsepower and torque is also normally much closer in diesel engines (if measured in lb ft), so how do they create all this extra grunt compared to petrol?

High compression ratio

Why Do Diesel Engines Produce So Much Torque?

The first reason is a much higher compression ratio. This is the ratio of the maximum and minimum volume in the cylinder of an engine. It’s made larger in a diesel engine due to a longer stroke, meaning the piston is moving up and down a larger internal volume of cylinder. Diesel engines never rev as high as petrol engines due to the fact that the piston has to travel further for its full rotation, while a petrol engine uses its shorter stroke to move the piston in quicker bursts, meaning the engine speed can be faster.

Higher calorific value

Why Do Diesel Engines Produce So Much Torque?

Another influence on torque output is the pressure exerted on the piston from the combusted fuel. Diesel (45500kJ/kg) has a slightly lower calorific value than petrol (45800kJ/kg) which means that more heat is actually contained within petrol for a given volume than diesel. However, diesel is much denser than petrol and can store up to 15 per cent more energy per given volume. This means that each time diesel is combusted, more energy is transferred through to pressure on the piston, increasing the amount of torque acting through the crankshaft.

Higher boost

Why Do Diesel Engines Produce So Much Torque?

Many diesel engines are also turbocharged to make up for the lack of out-and-out horsepower and engine speed. This then creates a higher pressure within the cylinder for the power stroke, which in turn creates an increase in torque. In comparison to turbochargers on gasoline engines, diesel turbos are generally setup to a much higher boost pressure, which reduces pumping losses during the intake stroke of the engine, allowing the engine to become more efficient in its conversion of energy through to the crankshaft.

The sleepiest of sleepers
The sleepiest of sleepers

The main thing to take from all this is that horsepower is definitely not the be-all and end-all, but it certainly has its uses. A petrol-powered racing engine can produce little torque but the sheer rev range can mean a high horsepower figure. On the other hand, a low revving diesel engine will always struggle to reach the same value in horsepower but can capitalise on the torque gains. This is why you never find diesel engines in any supercars or hypercars; if you have two engines making the same amount of torque but one of them is managing to rotate the crankshaft faster and therefore creating more power, you’d side with that one.

You must remember that diesel engines in their first instance were developed to rival the steam engine; engines designed to move very heavy loads, making high torque and constant speed essential. Gasoline engines on the other hand were developed for functions where high power-to-weight ratios were needed (early aircraft and motorbikes) and thus produce that fast-revving characteristic that most petrolheads crave over a torquey diesel.

The way to look at diesels is using an analogy like loading up your boot with something: let’s go with paving slabs. Petrol power is like carrying each single paving slab as quickly as possible, while a diesel engine is more like slowly moving four slabs at a time. The diesel engine is doing more work per engine revolution.

Anyone remember this?
Anyone remember this?

High performance diesels are also most certainly on the up – take Alpina for example. The D3 Bi-Turbo produces 345bhp and (predictably) 516lb ft of torque resulting in a 4.6sec 0-62mph time. That puts it in the territory of the BMW M2, an impressive achievement for a big, oil-burning estate. And who can forget Audi’s road-going R8 V12 TDI from 2008, which managed a top speed of 202mph through the extensive development of the company’s R18 Le Mans racers. Diesel power can therefore be effectively utilised for performance machinery, but the shift from petrol has yet to happen, thanks in part to the sudden rise in hybridisation and various diesel emissions scandals.

You probably won’t see Ferrari or Koenigsegg scrambling to develop diesel powertrains any time soon, but if out-and-out torque is required, rolling coal is the way to go.

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Comments

Anonymous

If you are talking American Diesel, like the Chevrolet Duramax, Ford Powerstroke, or Cummins, for example the stroke of the 6.6L (403 CID) Duramax is 3.90 inches, whereas the Chevy 350 CID Small Block has a stroke of 3.48 inches, and the Chevy 454 Big Block has a stroke of 4 inches, so making the generalization that all diesels have a longer stroke than gas (petrol) engines is incorrect. The reason a diesel has a higher compression ratio is because diesel engines use high heat generated from high conpression to ignite the fuel, whereas gasoline (petrol) engines use a spark from a spark plug.

06/20/2016 - 01:03 |
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Anonymous

Our old mercedes 190 -98 has never missed a beat. As said before the 2,5 l 5 cylinder non turbo 95hp diesel engine in this car is so relible the car will probobly rot away before the engine has any failor

06/20/2016 - 09:52 |
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UltimaSanctus

“Hp and tq numbers are usually closer” while american trucks have about 400hp and 800ft-lbs

06/20/2016 - 13:01 |
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CalmnessAndSandwiches

Ahem… Trident Iceni? Anyone?

06/20/2016 - 15:01 |
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Anonymous
06/21/2016 - 14:34 |
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Anonymous

Well, diesels dont all have a long stroke. They don’t rev high due to the fuel burning slower than petrol. So it limits itself to around 5500-6000 rpm. There are short stroke diesels out there, like the Volvo D3 and D4 5 cylinder engines… Also some diesels (Mazda Skyactive) have compression ratios of around 14:1 like the skyactive petrol engines…

06/22/2016 - 11:32 |
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Ben Anderson 1

The thing about Diesels is that, yes, their PEAK torque is very high, but their peak HORSEPOWER is very low compared to an equivalent Petrol powered engine. You need to remember that Horsepower is the number that represents how much Torque an engine produces per minute.

06/23/2016 - 19:50 |
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Anonymous

Longer stroke also means more leverage because the crank pins are further from the center of the crank. Torque is measured and hp is calculated via engine speed, how fast work is done.

12/15/2016 - 23:19 |
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Juha Arkkukangas

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Actually the stroke length in itself doesn’t increase torque. The “length of leverage” thing doesn’t work on combustion engine.

12/16/2016 - 12:03 |
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Anonymous

“rolling coal is the way to go”
Unless you’re volkswagen. Than you’re fuc*ed

12/16/2016 - 00:16 |
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Anonymous

Indeed, “why are they produce so much Torque”?

12/16/2016 - 00:22 |
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