18% loss. Air pressure at sea level is 1 atmosphere which is 14.6psi or 101kpa. Up here in Johannesburg it is around 11.3psi, or 0.8 atmospheres or 83 kpa.
142 x 0.18 = 25.5kw loss.
280 x 0.18 = 50,4nM loss.
Your car is only performing at 116.5kw and 229.6nM.
Likewise for M drivers. We lose massive amounts of power. An e46 M3 will lose 45,36kw of power and 63,9nm coming up to Johannesburg.
The bigger the engine the more loss of power.
Power to weight is also a factor. An e92 M3 has a power to weight ratio of 0.111hp for ever kg it weighs down at sea level. But up in JHB, that number drops to 0.098hp for ever Kg.
Turbo cars on the other hand have what is called a wastegate, which work with atmospheric pressure which in turn allows the wastegate to keep a targeted power level to enable the car to deliver similar power between sea level and high altitudes. The car automatically boosts higher to make up for the 3psi difference in air pressure. This is only a simple explanation but in all fairness it is why these cars perform better up here.
Carbon@TheFanatics said:
OppositeLockMT said:
Most stock supercharged systems also lose power at altitude.
Not true. In fact, all supercharged systems will lose power at altitude. This is because they are fixed gear systems and cannot suddenly spin faster to make up the loss in air pressure, hence, they suffer exactly the same loss than an NA engine would.
For my supercharged m3 to run 5psi up in JHB, I had to use an 8psi pulley wheel.
Hope this helps.
Thank you Crash, Carbon.
I assume an NA car in CT or KZN feels completely different. I still prefer the linear power delivery of an NA motor (call me old fashioned), but I appreciate the tech that goes into the newer FI cars, particularly BMW's N57.