maybe you can put your book down, and talk in reality. there is no 1000000000000000000000motor that spins a car drive train. so throw that away.
flat percentages don't work if you're going to figure drive train loss. END OF STORY. you can express the drive train loss in a percent, but you can't use a percent to figure it out.
is that easy enough for you professor?
Dude, you just don't understand what I said. No shit it's not a flat %. Duh. But it's not constant either. I've said this 3 times now if you haven't noticed. It's complex. There are multiple losses that must be accounted for. You can have different % power losses at the same power too. (I'll let you ponder how that's possible)
its minuscule difference in the power levels we're talking. so minuscule it doesn't even fucking matter and we should not be talking about it.
thanks.
Uh, wrong.
Super simplified example. (extremely dumbed down) You have a stock motor that makes 200 flywheel HP. Of that, 35HP gets eaten up from friction losses through the drivetrain, 5HP for churning oil and everything else. So you loose 40hp total and put 160hp to the wheels. 20% drivetrain loss.
Stop. Think. What's friction?
Now turbocharge this motor and it puts out 400hp. You'll loose say (35*2) = 70hp due to friction and 5 HP from churning oil and everything else, and put down 400-75 = 325 hp to the wheels, for a 18.75% efficient drivetrain.
And perhaps at 500hp you've got 18% drivetrain loss.
But eventually you'll reach a point where as you begin to increase the power going through the drivetrain, bearings begin to overheat and bind up, gears rubbing get hotter than normal and bind, causing more friction and heat, and the problem compounds. So by the time you're at say 600hp, your efficiency might fall off back to 20%.
Or just believe whatever you want.