If I had money to buy horses then I wouldn't be driving a Corolla.You have horses?
I'll prove you all wrong when I'm the first person in history to haul a horse trailer from sea to sea using a Toyota Corolla. If my calculations are correct, it should be about as difficult as driving an 18 wheeler. The tare weight of an 18 wheeler is about 20,000 pounds and the department of transportation says the maximum interstate load is 80,000 pounds total which would be 60,000 pounds towed. That puts it at a weight ratio of about 3:1. A Corolla carrying me and a bunch of other shit is about 3000 pounds, so multiply 3 = I'll haul 9000 pounds of horse + trailer. An 18 wheeler has about 700 horsepower, so that would be 60,000/700 = 85.7 pounds per horsepower maximum. My Corolla has 130hp, so the maximum would be around 130*85.7 = 11,141 pounds maximum. I said I would only pull 9000, so this is all good.
Alrighty let's git er dun. I need you guys to pray that my transmission doesn't melt. If I get stranded in the middle of nowhere, those horses might starve to death![]()
Congratulations - this is you.
Oh, just FYI...the 700hp Volvo semi engine makes over 2300lb-ft of torque, and it's not hooked up to a four speed transmission.
Don't worry about the transmission. I'll just sloooooowly accelerate until first gear is rolling fast enough to lock the torque converter. After it has been directly coupled, I can floor it all I want.
Video is blocked at work. Can you describe what it shows?
Slowly accelerate in first gear? Yeahhhh, haven't you heard semis leaving a traffic light? They're in, like, fifth gear by the time the trailer clears the intersection..you'll be lucky if you move faster than the tricycle on the sidewalk. Given any sort of hill, your torque converter is going to be crying.
Your trans will melt before you reach the town line, aux cooler or no.
Why again are you determined to destroy your car?
Why the hate for Colorado/Canyon? I had a rental Colorado and it was an awesome truck, aside from the lack of ground clearance. It had a nice ride and the frame felt really stiff and sturdy.
Fine then I'll put a big cooler on the torque converter. Don't worry about hills since those shouldn't be a problem once everything is up to speed. As long as the vehicle is already moving, I can make it up the hill in first gear at max power. First gear in my Corolla ends at a little under 60km/h which would be about 16.6m/s. The engine is rated for 132HP at the crank but let's say 100HP after drivetrain loss. Converted to metric would be 100 * 746 = 74600W. P = vF so F = P/v = 74600/16.6 = 4494 newtons. Converted to pounds would be 1010 pounds of force. I said my car would be 3000 pounds and the uhaul of rocks is 9000 so that's 12000 pounds total. Gravity I'm fighting against would be shown as 1010 = 12000*sine(theta). Theta is then equal to 4.83 degrees maximum slope.
Ok you were right. I can't pull a uhaul full of rocks up a hill. It can't even do 5 degrees.
edit. Since I was just looking at first gear I probably should have used maximum torque at 4000 rpm instead of maximum power at 6000, but it wouldn't make a difference really.
