AKA balls to the wall.But the weights were ball shaped usually, so they would just say Balls Out.
Dude if you have ask a stupid question like that, you might want to head to another forum! Just MHO you understandIs there a forum rule against the word **CENSORED**? I didn't read the sticky's yet. Asking for a friend...
No, I don't understand. I took it off as soon as it was brought up, and now you are beating a dead horse. I made a mistake, corrected it and moved on. No need for any more comments about it.Dude if you have ask a stupid question like that, you might want to head to another forum! Just MHO you understand
Sure, but high RPM does give you speed. During mowing, turning knives or blades, higher speed will help you get through the thick stuff without bogging as much.With any engine, there are TWO 'curves' to consider, one is RPM the other is torque. Higher RPM doesn't equate to more torque.
Hot rodders who 'dyno' there engines get a report with fancy graphs so they can then 'tune' the engine for whatever purpose they need.
Traditionally a long stroke 6 cylinder engine has more torque than a V8. That was proven when I 'upgrade' my CJ-5 and LOST snowplowing capability.
This makes me miss my old Jeep Comanche. It had a 4.0L I6 with tractor-LIKE torque. Wasn't there an old VW commercial where they said everyone talks about HP but drives torque?With any engine, there are TWO 'curves' to consider, one is RPM the other is torque. Higher RPM doesn't equate to more torque.
Hot rodders who 'dyno' there engines get a report with fancy graphs so they can then 'tune' the engine for whatever purpose they need.
Traditionally a long stroke 6 cylinder engine has more torque than a V8. That was proven when I 'upgrade' my CJ-5 and LOST snowplowing capability.
Its my belief that “balls to the wall” were not about counterweight-balls of a governor. They were the ball-shaped knobs on throttles...which were shoved fully against the firewall...to obtain maximum power. This is a common aviation term.AKA balls to the wall.
SDT
Both.Its my belief that “balls to the wall” were not about counterweight-balls of a governor. They were the ball-shaped knobs on throttles...which were shoved fully against the firewall...to obtain maximum power. This is a common aviation term.
How is a speed-governor related to a “wall” of any kind? ...and especially since most counterweights are NOT ball-shaped?Both.
SDT
My backhoe is my back and a shovel. Or a hoe, depending on the job I guess.My backhoe is almost unusable at high RPMs. I find around 1600 the sweet spot for power and control.
It’s called a flyball governor. From James Watt I believe. Modern etymology expands the term balls out for pretty much anything with a throttle.How is a speed-governor related to a “wall” of any kind? ...and especially since most counterweights are NOT ball-shaped?
I understand that concept... What I’m wondering is how “balls to the wall” came to be thought of as anything other than a ball-shaped throttle and a firewall. I don’t see a connection to a governors ball-shaped weights and a “wall”.It’s called a flyball governor. From James Watt I believe. Modern etymology expands the term balls out for pretty much anything with a throttle.