Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: sao123
Inline engines have a longer stroke than the compact v configurations.
Any freshman who has had a first year physics course knows that a longer arm turning a radial device has more torque than a shorter arm.
And anyone who is past a freshman level education would know that you are wrong. First of all not all I6 engines have a longer stroke than V6's. You can give an I6 a long stroke, or you can give it a shorter stroke. There is nothing inherent in the I6's design that dictates that it must have a longer stroke than a V6. My Nissan's V6 has a longer stroke than Nissan's I6 in the Skyline. Bore is about the same, but their I6's stroke is shorter.
Also, that's been a point of contention forever in the domestic circles. You had people who believed that when they stroked their engine, it was the longer stroke itself which gave them the added torque. Others disagreed and believed that it was strictly the increase in displacement from stroking it that gave them more torque. They pointed out that if you increased the bore size to deliver the same displacement as you'd get if you stroked the engine, you'd have the same amount of torque. As a benefit, you can rev the engine higher if it was a larger bore to stroke ratio. If you stroke a 350 to 383 ci, you get more torque. But it's not because you gave it a longer stroke, it's because you gave it more displacement.