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Force, Torque, Speed and Power

Systems Engineering
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Force, Torque, Speed and Power

Systems Engineering
01 May 2026

Force, Torque, Speed, and Power in Mechanical Systems

Overview

Four fundamental physical quantities describe the behaviour of mechanical systems: force, torque, speed, and power. Mastery of their definitions, units, interrelationships, and calculations is essential for analysing and designing mechanical systems in VCE Systems Engineering.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Force is the push/pull on an object; torque is the rotational equivalent of force; speed describes how fast motion occurs; power is the rate at which work (energy) is transferred.

Force

Force ($F$) is a push or pull that causes, or tends to cause, a change in motion.

$$F = ma$$

Symbol Quantity SI Unit
$F$ Force Newton (N)
$m$ Mass kilogram (kg)
$a$ Acceleration m/s²

In static mechanical systems (no acceleration), the forces are in equilibrium:
$$\sum F = 0$$

Worked example:
A 20 kg object rests on a surface. What force must a lever exert to lift it?
$$F_{load} = mg = 20 \times 9.8 = 196 \text{ N}$$

EXAM TIP: Always use $g = 9.8$ m/s² (or 10 m/s² if the question specifies) when converting mass to weight force.

Torque

Torque ($\tau$) is the rotational equivalent of force — it is the turning effect of a force about a pivot point.

$$\tau = F \times d$$

where:
- $\tau$ = torque (N·m)
- $F$ = force applied (N)
- $d$ = perpendicular distance from the pivot to the line of action of the force (m)

Principle of moments (equilibrium):
$$\tau_{clockwise} = \tau_{anticlockwise}$$

Worked example:
A spanner applies 25 N at 0.3 m from the bolt centre.
$$\tau = 25 \times 0.3 = 7.5 \text{ N·m}$$

If a second force of 15 N acts on the other side at distance $d$:
$\$15 \times d = 7.5 \quad \Rightarrow \quad d = 0.5 \text{ m}$$

VCAA FOCUS: Torque in gear systems: when a gear reduces speed, it multiplies torque proportionally (and vice versa). This is directly related to the gear ratio.

Torque in gear trains:
If gear ratio $GR = T_{driven}/T_{driver}$:
$$\tau_{driven} = \tau_{driver} \times GR \quad (\text{ignoring losses})$$

A 3:1 reduction gear triples the output torque.

Speed

In mechanical systems, two types of speed are used:

Linear speed ($v$): Distance per unit time
$$v = \frac{d}{t} \quad \text{(m/s or m/min)}$$

Rotational speed ($N$): Revolutions per minute (rpm) or radians per second

Relationship between linear and rotational speed:
$$v = \omega r = \frac{2\pi N r}{60}$$

where $r$ = radius (m), $N$ = speed in rpm, $\omega$ = angular velocity (rad/s).

Worked example:
A pulley of diameter 0.2 m rotates at 300 rpm. Find the belt speed.
$$r = 0.1 \text{ m}, \quad v = \frac{2\pi \times 300 \times 0.1}{60} = \frac{60\pi}{60} = \pi \approx 3.14 \text{ m/s}$$

Speed in gear trains:
$$\frac{N_{driver}}{N_{driven}} = \frac{T_{driven}}{T_{driver}}$$

A step-up gear train increases output speed; a step-down increases output torque.

REMEMBER: Speed and torque trade off against each other in a gear train. The product (power) is approximately constant (minus losses).

Power

Power ($P$) is the rate at which work is done or energy is transferred:

$$P = \frac{W}{t} = \frac{F \times d}{t} = F \times v$$

For rotational systems:
$$P = \tau \times \omega = \frac{2\pi N \tau}{60}$$

Symbol Quantity SI Unit
$P$ Power Watt (W)
$W$ Work Joule (J)
$t$ Time second (s)
$\tau$ Torque N·m
$\omega$ Angular velocity rad/s

Worked example:
A motor produces 8 N·m of torque at 1500 rpm. Find the power output.
$$\omega = \frac{2\pi \times 1500}{60} = 50\pi \approx 157 \text{ rad/s}$$
$$P = 8 \times 157 = 1257 \text{ W} \approx 1.26 \text{ kW}$$

COMMON MISTAKE: Forgetting to convert rpm to rad/s before using $P = \tau\omega$. Always convert: $\omega = 2\pi N/60$.

Interrelationships Summary

$$P = F \times v = \tau \times \omega$$

$$\tau = F \times d$$

$$v = \omega \times r$$

These relationships mean that when a gear train reduces speed (smaller $\omega$), torque ($\tau$) increases proportionally to maintain constant power (minus losses).

Application: Gear Train Design

A machine requires 50 N·m torque at 200 rpm. The motor provides 10 N·m at 1000 rpm.

Required gear ratio:
$$GR = \frac{1000}{200} = 5:1 \text{ reduction}$$

Torque check (ideal):
$$\tau_{out} = 10 \times 5 = 50 \text{ N·m} \checkmark$$

Power check:
$$P_{motor} = \frac{2\pi \times 1000 \times 10}{60} = 1047 \text{ W}$$
$$P_{output} = \frac{2\pi \times 200 \times 50}{60} = 1047 \text{ W} \checkmark \text{ (ideal)}$$

APPLICATION: When selecting a motor for a system, calculate the required torque and speed at the output, then work backwards through the drive train using gear ratios to determine what the motor must provide.

Units Quick Reference

Quantity Unit Conversion
Force N 1 kgf ≈ 9.8 N
Torque N·m
Linear speed m/s 1 km/h = 1/3.6 m/s
Rotational speed rpm or rad/s $\omega = 2\pi N/60$
Power W (Watt) 1 kW = 1000 W

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