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Almost all of it.The engine of a car at 60 MPH is doing very little apart from overcoming drag.So you can estimate the power used in overcoming that drag by saying it's more or less the same as the engine's power output.
It's probably good to an order of magnitude.Finding teh power output of engines isn't that hard if you have some indication of the efficiency.
Why is it nearly impossible to find this data?http://www.automobile-catalog.com/curve/2016/2082425/ford_focus_1_0_ecoboost_125.html
You can calculate it from the drag equation:F = 0.5 * p * u^2 * Cd * AWhere p is the density of the air (depends on altitude, 1.225 kg/m^3 at sea level), u is the speed in metres per second (26.8 m/s at 60 mph), Cd is coefficient of drag, and A is the cross-sectional area of the car, viewed from the front.And the power is F * uSo you just need the frontal cross-section and the Cd factor, they are often quoted for a car.
Sounds good, any sample calculation for a usual car?
Quote from: wolfekeeper on 24/06/2018 21:03:34You can calculate it from the drag equation:F = 0.5 * p * u^2 * Cd * AWhere p is the density of the air (depends on altitude, 1.225 kg/m^3 at sea level), u is the speed in metres per second (26.8 m/s at 60 mph), Cd is coefficient of drag, and A is the cross-sectional area of the car, viewed from the front.And the power is F * uSo you just need the frontal cross-section and the Cd factor, they are often quoted for a car.Sounds good, any sample calculation for a usual car?
Can anyone do some sample calculations to give me an idea?I am struggling with my discalculia.