Saturday, September 30, 2017

newtonian mechanics - If friction acts on car all time, why is it not accelerating forever?



In the first gear, slowly releasing my clutch i push the gas pedal to the maximum torque level, say at 2000 rpm. Now as the engine torque is acting on the wheel, friction helps the car to accelerate.



If i hold the gas pedal at that position, the torque should continuously act on the wheel and the car should increase speed forever. But in reality even if we put the gas pedal at the max.torque rpm range in first gear it speeds up to certain wheel rpm (say 500rpm) and it stays there only. Why?




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