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| AI image generated by Google Gemini. |
Did you know that a child can probably produce more torque using their arm, than a lawn mower engine can generate to turn the blade? Surprisingly, the figure for the torque of a 5 hp engine used on a mower is 7 to 10
foot-pounds (ft·lbf) in the imperial system or 11.5 to 13.6
newton-meters (Nm). Applied torque is simply force multiplied by distance, so 1 pound-force applied over a distance of 1 foot from a pivot is 1 foot-pound. In the metric system, the unit of torque is the newton-metre (Nm). A torque of 1 Nm is equivalent to one newton—the SI unit of force—applied over a distance of one metre. The speed of a lawn mower blade is more important than torque, and blades are driven directly by the crankshaft without reduction or overdrive gearing. Blades typically spin at the engine speed of around 3000 RPM, giving a blade tip speed of around 200 mph, or 90 metres per second.
As we saw in the article Interesting Facts - What is Torque?
power = torque x angular rotation speed
So while a child may be able to exert more torque with their arm than a mower engine can exert on a blade, they wouldn't be able to match its power. Another piece of the jigsaw is that the quoted figure of 11 to 13 Nm is for the drive torque from the engine. Since a blade is spinning at around 3000 RPM, it has a lot of inertia. The technical term for this when a rotating body such as a flywheel or blade is involved is moment of inertia. When a blade slows down as it impacts grass, the change in angular momentum creates a force, just like the way a car or any linearly-moving object creates a force as it slows down due to friction, or when it hits something (think of the huge force produced by a hammer, typically many tonnes, when it hits a nail). So the force produced by a blade as it impacts and shears grass is much greater than the force that the engine itself could have generated.
Note: You may be wondering why "newton" in "newton-metres" above isn't capitalised. The unit is named after the English scientist Isaac Newton. It's not a typo. In the International System of Units (SI), or Système international d'unités, units named after a person are not capitalised. However, the symbol is, N in this case, Units are normally lower case, as are prefixes. However, prefixes over one million are capitalised—so kilometres is km, but gigahertz is GHz.