

rear axle) ratio for fast cars was chosen to give the ratio for maximum speed. With the early development of cars and the almost universal rear-wheel drive layout, the final drive (i.e. This power is available well below the engine's power peak and so the ideal cruising gear is an overdrive gear, a ratio higher than that for absolute top speed. As drag causes the power needed to increase with the cube of the velocity (v 3), most cars will be capable of achieving a fast cruising speed less than their maximum, with far less power being required. A car's speed is limited by the power available to drive it against air resistance-so the maximum possible speed is obtained at the engine's point of maximum power, or power peak, and the gear ratio necessary to achieve this will be the single ratio between these two speeds. The point of maximum power is somewhat slower than the absolute maximum RPM to which the engine is limited, the " redline". The power produced by an engine increases with the engine's RPM to a maximum, then falls away. The purpose of such a gear may not be immediately obvious. the car could travel faster if it were in a lower gear, with the engine turning more quickly. The most fundamental meaning is that of an overall gear ratio between engine and wheels, such that the car is now over-geared and can no longer reach its potential top speed, i.e. Use of the term is confused, as it is applied to several different, but related, meanings. Overdrive (OD) is a term used to describe a mechanism that allows an automobile to cruise at sustained speed with reduced engine RPM, leading to better fuel economy, lower noise and lower wear. Laycock de Normanville "J type" Overdrive Unit. (note the extra gear housing being built instead of the thin tail end.) The same gearbox with electro-hydraulic operated overdrive.

(Note the thin tail end under the gearshift lever) Gearbox without electro-hydraulic operated overdrive. A plate warns to only engage the unit in third and fourth gears. (January 2011)Īn overdrive is sometimes a separate unit that fits into the back of a gearbox, as with this Fairey unit. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. This article needs additional citations for verification.
