by Tony » Mon Sep 11, 2006 7:27 pm
Bruce is right, bigger diameter roller, much better traction, but there are other factors to think about.
You need to think about the Rpm of both tractor and roller, tractor tyre diameter, and the torque/Rpm capability of the power absorber attatched to the rollers.
Most ordinary commercial automotive roller dynos all seem to use use fairly small diameter rollers, usually around the eight to ten inch size. But if you think about it, with a car running in top gear, max engine redline rpm might correspond a road speed of perhaps 100mph to 150 mph for most typical types of road car.
Take 120mph as a sort of rough average. Now roller speed will depend on roller diameter. Most eddy current absorbers have a maximum rated safe operating speed of 4,000 Rpm, and that is probably a fairly realistic design speed for the roller bearings and other mechanical components.
So if you figure on 120mph maximum roller surface speed at 4,000 roller Rpm.
That works out to 10,560 feet per minute roller surface speed.
10,560/4,000 = 2.64 feet circumference (or 31.68 inches)
Divide by pi, to come up with almost exactly a ten inch diameter roller.
But many standard unmodified road cars are not going to reach anything like 120mph in top gear, so many commercial tuning dynos often have roller sizes an inch or two smaller than ten inches. But that is the sort of basic thinking that establishes roller size.
How fast does a tractor go absolutely flat out in top gear, I have no idea ? I suspect that the practical gearing of a tractor may require a theoretical optimum roller diameter that is just too small to get sufficient traction. Large rollers may be unavoidable.
One possibility might be to use some really extra large diameter dyno wheels on the tractor with dead smooth tyres, combined with suitably larger diameter dyno rollers. That would reduce tractive effort, and increase roller surface speed which might make non slip power transfer into the rollers more efficient with a low geared tractor.
Also known as the infamous "Warpspeed" on some other Forums.