Watts and H.P.?

speedre9

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Been looking at spindles on E-bay. Many of them from Hon Kong and China but are rated in either watts or Kilowatts. Some are rated 200 w. and some are 1.5 kw. how do I know what the h.p. equivalents are.?
 
Been looking at spindles on E-bay. Many of them from Hon Kong and China but are rated in either watts or Kilowatts. Some are rated 200 w. and some are 1.5 kw. how do I know what the h.p. equivalents are.?[/QUOte-------this link will answer your ques.http://www.rapidtables.com/convert/power/watt-to-hp.htm----enjoy--re steve in mt.

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Been looking at spindles on E-bay. Many of them from Hon Kong and China but are rated in either watts or Kilowatts. Some are rated 200 w. and some are 1.5 kw. how do I know what the h.p. equivalents are.?[/QUOte-------this link will answer your ques.http://www.rapidtables.com/convert/power/watt-to-hp.htm----enjoy--re steve in mt.
---that link did not help but i believe this one will do the job. re steve in mt.http://www.kylesconverter.com/power/horsepower-to-watts
 
I just use Google when I want to convert something I can't do in my head. Simply type in "convert 1.5kw to hp" and it will do it for you. Works for all sorts of conversions. It's a good calculator.
 
Been looking at spindles on E-bay. Many of them from Hon Kong and China but are rated in either watts or Kilowatts. Some are rated 200 w. and some are 1.5 kw. how do I know what the h.p. equivalents are.?[/QUOte-------this link will answer your ques.http://www.rapidtables.com/convert/power/watt-to-hp.htm----enjoy--re steve in mt.

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---that link did not help but i believe this one will do the job. re steve in mt.http://www.kylesconverter.com/power/horsepower-to-watts

746 watts = 1 horsepower so a 1.5kw is just under 2 hp, the 200 watt is about 1/4 hp. Tim
 
As others have posted above, 746W = 1HP. However, while HP almost refers to the output of the motor (assuming the manufacturer is being honest), the wattage can refer to either the output or the electrical power consumed by the motor... which will always be more than the output.

However, watts are also voltage times amps... so if, for example a 120V motor draws 10 amps (1200W) and they're saying 1.2kW, you can be sure that's the input and not the output power.
 
What everyone says is true and I'll add one more thing. Sometimes you'll see ratings in Watts and sometimes it's expressed as kVxA. Watts will always just be expressed as the nominal operating Voltage times the Amperage where as kVxA will often take into consideration the power factor which is usually estimated to be 0.8. This means there is (in a typical inductive load like a motor) a 20% difference in the lag of peak voltage and peak current. You'll notice that in almost all cases kVxA is 80% the value of the rated Watts. That 20% is pure waste. The Watts tell you how much your electric meter spins and kVxA is telling you how much work is actually being done.

Ray
 
Correction to my above post, "HP almost refers" should have been "HP always refers".
 
Thank you very much, I will be able to do the math now.
 
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