It’s confusing the way torque and power are talked about. Maybe someone can square me away? The confusion is people referencing max torque of engines from torque curves.
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Related to snowblowers only. The following are not statements of fact. They are my understanding.
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Torque is the guy that tosses the snow, the lifting energy.   Power (speed) is also a factor. Together they make up the needed elements for throughput related to torque (how much can be gobbled up) and power (distance of toss from engine/impeller speed).Â
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Torque and power have to be considered together at the useful “range†which for a snowblower is max throttle, max RPM. For the RPM part that is max under load so 3600 drooping to ?? unsure but a guess 3000.Â
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People talk about how much torque is available for a given engine and those figures usually reference torque curves. Referencing torque curves seems useless for a snowblower because it’s never operated in the range of RPM where max torque happens.  Any references to these numbers for a snowblower are meaningless.
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The only part of a torque curve that is the meaningful for snowblowers is the far end (not max torque from the curve) and that happens at 3000 to 3600 (the far end). Â
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Is the above right? Max torque from curves is not useful for a snowblower. It’s what is at the far end of the curve that is meaningful for snowblowers.  The 3000 to 3600 section of the curve. No one runs their engine at 2400 RPM.Â