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From reading the same article it appears that the author is getting the length of the rod confused with the stroke. The complete quote is: "The longer the connecting rod the more force (torque) can be applied to the crankshaft. Note from the below engine specification sheets that the diesel stroke is 4. 72 inches compared to the gasoline engine stroke of 3. 58 inches. " The second sentence doesn't make a lot of sense if it is intended to support the length of the rod statement. You can have a long rod with a short stroke and vice versa. However, a short rod with a long stroke gets into some leverage angle problems. The biggest factor in leverage as shown by the author's example of the ratchet is the length of the stroke which is twice the distance from the center of the crank to the center of the rod journal or (expressed another way) the distance that the top of the piston travels from top to bottom in the cylinder. This number and the diameter of the cylinder determine the displacement for one cylinder (pi * r2 * h). That times the number of cylinders determins the displacement of the engine. Comparing the bore and stroke of an eight cylinder engine vs a six cylinder engine is not really a good comparison. The length of the rod is really a measurment of how far the piston is from the crank (roughly). Within limits this measurement does not have a lot to do with torque. A long rod vs a very long rod would produce about the same amount of lever advantage on the same crank shaft. Increase the distance from the center of the crank to the center of the rod journal and there will always be an increase in torque. This is what the author of that article is demonstating with his ratchet example not the length of the rod which in the case of a ratchet is the length of your arm.
From reading the same article it appears that the author is getting the length of the rod confused with the stroke. The complete quote is: "The longer the connecting rod the more force (torque) can be applied to the crankshaft. Note from the below engine specification sheets that the diesel stroke is 4. 72 inches compared to the gasoline engine stroke of 3. 58 inches. " The second sentence doesn't make a lot of sense if it is intended to support the length of the rod statement. You can have a long rod with a short stroke and vice versa. However, a short rod with a long stroke gets into some leverage angle problems. The biggest factor in leverage as shown by the author's example of the ratchet is the length of the stroke which is twice the distance from the center of the crank to the center of the rod journal or (expressed another way) the distance that the top of the piston travels from top to bottom in the cylinder. This number and the diameter of the cylinder determine the displacement for one cylinder (pi * r2 * h). That times the number of cylinders determins the displacement of the engine. Comparing the bore and stroke of an eight cylinder engine vs a six cylinder engine is not really a good comparison. The length of the rod is really a measurment of how far the piston is from the crank (roughly). Within limits this measurement does not have a lot to do with torque. A long rod vs a very long rod would produce about the same amount of lever advantage on the same crank shaft. Increase the distance from the center of the crank to the center of the rod journal and there will always be an increase in torque. This is what the author of that article is demonstating with his ratchet example not the length of the rod which in the case of a ratchet is the length of your arm.