Horsepower-hour
Horsepower-hour | |
---|---|
Unit of | Energy |
Symbol | hp⋅h |
Unit conversions | |
1 hp⋅h in ... | ... is equal to ... |
SI units | 2.685 MJ |
CGS units | ×1013 erg 2.685 |
English Engineering Units | ×106 ft⋅lbf 1.98 |
A horsepower-hour (hph or hp⋅h) is an outdated unit of energy, not used in the SI system of units. The unit represents an amount of work a horse is supposed capable of delivering during an hour (1 (one) horsepower integrated over a time interval of an hour). Based on differences in the definition of what constitutes the 'power of a horse', a horsepower-hour differs slightly from the German "Pferdestärkenstunde" (PSh):
- 1.014 PSh = 1 hph = 1,980,000 lbf⋅ft = 0.7457 kWh.
- 1 PSh = 0.73549875 kW⋅h = 2647.7955 kJ (exactly by definition)
The horsepower-hour is still used in the railroad industry when sharing motive power (locomotives.) For example, if Railroad A borrows a 2,500 horsepower locomotive from Railroad B and operates it for twelve hours, Railroad A owes a debt of (2,500 hp × 12 h) = 30,000 hp⋅h. Railroad A may repay the debt by loaning Railroad B a 3,000 horsepower locomotive for ten hours.[1]
References
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-12-04. Retrieved 2009-05-25.