Previous in Forum: Pressure Vessel - Nozzle Loads   Next in Forum: Nozzle Thickness on Spherical Tank
Close
Close
Close
12 comments
Rate Comments: Nested
Anonymous Poster

Question

02/24/2009 12:10 PM

How can I conver BTU/hr to BHP?

Thanks,

Reply
Interested in this topic? By joining CR4 you can "subscribe" to
this discussion and receive notification when new comments are added.

"Almost" Good Answers:

Check out these comments that don't yet have enough votes to be "official" good answers and, if you agree with them, vote them!
Guru

Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: nj,usa
Posts: 1253
Good Answers: 33
#1

Re: Question

02/24/2009 12:36 PM

1 boiler horsepower (BHP) = 33520 BTU/hr

__________________
CARPE CRUSTULORUM!
Reply
Guru
Hobbies - Fishing - Old Salt Hobbies - CNC - New Member United States - US - Statue of Liberty - New Member

Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Rosedale, Maryland USA
Posts: 5197
Good Answers: 266
#2
In reply to #1

Re: Question

02/24/2009 12:40 PM

And here I thought BHP stood for brake horse power.

__________________
Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving in a pretty, pristine body but rather to come sliding in sideways, all used up and exclaiming, "Wow, what a ride!"
Reply
Guru

Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: nj,usa
Posts: 1253
Good Answers: 33
#3
In reply to #2

Re: Question

02/24/2009 6:31 PM

I guess it's not standardized

__________________
CARPE CRUSTULORUM!
Reply
Guru
Engineering Fields - Mechanical Engineering - New Member Hobbies - CNC - New Member

Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Western Australia
Posts: 767
Good Answers: 58
#4
In reply to #3

Re: Question

02/24/2009 9:20 PM

Rather - many many standards. This is why the Watt is such a useful thing these days.

This is extracted from Nation Master and is about as useful an indication of the various HP's that are used that I have found.

Encyclopedia > Horse power

The horsepower (hp) is the name of several non-metric units of power. In scientific discourse the horsepower is rarely used due to the various definitions and the existence of an SI unit for power, the watt (W). However, the idea of horsepower persists as a legacy term in many languages, particularly in the automotive industry for listing the maximum power of internal-combustion engines.

According to the most common definition of horsepower, one horsepower is defined as exactly:

1 hp = 745.69987158227022 W

The horsepower was first used by James Watt during a business venture where his steam engines substituted horses. It was defined that a horse can lift 33,000 pounds with a speed of 1 foot per minute: 33,000 ft?lbf?min-1. This is roughly equivalent to lifting 147,000 Newtons (the weight of a 15,000 kg mass) at a speed of 0.005 metre per second. [1] (http://www.web-cars.com/math/horsepower.html)


brake horsepower (bhp)

Brake horsepower was a term commonly used before the 1970s in the United States, and is still common in the United Kingdom. It indicates the brake, the device for measuring the true power of the engine. Stating power in 'bhp' gives some indication this is a true reading, rather than a calculated or predicted one. However, several manufacturers started to strip their engines of essential ancillaries for the purposes of getting a high horsepower figure to use in marketing the car.

hp (SAE)

In the United States the term fell into disuse after the American Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) recommended manufacturers use "hp (SAE)" to indicate the power of the engine, given that particular car's complete engine installation. This may also be stated as "SAE net hp" or simply "net hp". The British market seemed not to need the correction.

indicated horsepower (ihp)

Indicated horsepower is the theoretical power of a reciprocating engine assuming that it is completely efficient in converting the energy contained in the expanding gases in the cylinders. It is calculated from the pressures developed in the cylinders, measured by a device called an engine indicator - hence indicated horsepower. It was the figure normally used for steam engines in the 19th century but is misleading because the mechanical efficiency an engine means that the actual power output may be only 70-90% of the indicated horsepower.

drawbar horsepower (dbhp)

Drawbar horsepower is the power a railroad locomotive has available to haul a train. This is a measured figure rather than a calculated one. A special railroad car called a dynamometer car coupled behind the locomotive keeps a continuous record of the drawbar pull exerted, and the speed. From these, the power generated can be calculated. To determine the maximum power available, a controllable load is required; this is normally a second locomotive with its brakes applied, in addition to a static load.

RAC horsepower

This measure was instituted by the Royal Automobile Club in Britain and used to denote the power of early 20th century British cars. Many cars hence had names such as "40/50hp", which indicated the RAC figure followed by the true measured power.


RAC horsepower cannot be given as a proportion to metric power. Instead, it is derived from dimensions of the engine and certain assumptions about engine efficiency. When invented, it gave a rough guide to its true power rating; as new engines were designed with ever-increasing efficiency, it was no longer a useful measure, but was kept in use by UK regulations which used the rating for tax purposes.

where

D is the diameter (or bore) of the cylinder in inches

n is the number of cylinders

This is equal to the displacement in cubic inches divided by 10π then divided again by the stroke in inches. [2] (http://www.designchambers.com/wolfhound/wolfhoundRACHP.htm)

metric horsepower

PS

This unit (German: Pferdeste = horse strength) is still commonly used in Germany and central Europe, although not a lawful unit any more. It was adopted throughout continental Europe with designations equivalent to the English "horse power", but mathematically different from the British unit. It is defined by the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB)[3] (http://www.ptb.de/) in Braunschweig as exactly:

1 PS = 75 kp?m/s = 735.49875 W

pk

A Dutch paardekracht equals the German Pferdeste hence

1 pk = 735.49875 W

CV

Often the French name for the Pferdest䲫e. Also a French unit for tax horsepower, short for chevaux vapeur ("steam horses").


Hence Citro뮟2CV.


In Italy, Spain and Portugal, 'CV' is sthe equivalent to the German 'PS'.

ch

This is a French unit for automobile power. The symbol ch is short for chevaux ("horses"). Some sources give it as 735.5 W, but it is generally used interchangeably with the German 'PS'.

boiler horsepower

A boiler horsepower is used for boilers in power plants. It is equal to 33,475 Btu/h (9.8095 kW).

__________________
If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough. (A.E.)
Reply Score 1 for Good Answer
Guru

Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Sherwood Park, Alberta, Canada
Posts: 1212
Good Answers: 74
#5
In reply to #4

Re: Question

02/24/2009 10:11 PM

Seems to me that, on the basis of what you have indicated in your post that horsepower is an extremely silly and confusing unit for scientists and engineers to be using. So let us abandon the use of horsepower and adopt the watt instead, say watt?

__________________
Bruce
Reply
Guru

Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Hop around Toronto, New York & Karachi
Posts: 1876
Good Answers: 19
#8
In reply to #5

Re: Question

02/25/2009 10:05 AM

1 watt = 3.4129 btu/hr = 0.001341 horsepower

1 btu/hr = 0.2931 watts

1 horsepower = 745.7 watts

__________________
I not only use all the brains that I have, but all that I can borrow. Woodrow Wilson
Reply
Guru

Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: nj,usa
Posts: 1253
Good Answers: 33
#7
In reply to #4

Re: Question

02/25/2009 9:26 AM

My head hurts.

__________________
CARPE CRUSTULORUM!
Reply Off Topic (Score 5)
Guru

Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Hop around Toronto, New York & Karachi
Posts: 1876
Good Answers: 19
#6

Re: Question

02/24/2009 11:20 PM

Horsepower-hours = 2547 Btu

Btu/hr = 0.0003927 horsepower-hours

BoHP = boiler horsepower and conversion given by Not so smart

__________________
I not only use all the brains that I have, but all that I can borrow. Woodrow Wilson
Reply
Anonymous Poster
#9

Re: Question

05/11/2009 10:25 PM

why would in the first place you raised this question if you can already find everything in the net?

Reply Off Topic (Score 5)
Power-User

Join Date: May 2011
Location: Chennai, TAMIL NADU, INDIA
Posts: 108
Good Answers: 1
#10

Re: Question

05/14/2011 2:14 PM

2545 BTU/HR. IS EQUAL TO ONE H.P

RAJESWARI

Reply
Guru

Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Hop around Toronto, New York & Karachi
Posts: 1876
Good Answers: 19
#11
In reply to #10

Re: Question

05/14/2011 2:51 PM

2545 Btu = 1.000223 Hp

2546 Btu = 1.000616 Hp

2547 Btu = 1.001.009 Hp

2548 Btu = 1.001402 Hp

Ok now try make your selection

__________________
I not only use all the brains that I have, but all that I can borrow. Woodrow Wilson
Reply
Guru
Engineering Fields - Mechanical Engineering - New Member India - Member - New Member

Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: City of destiny, INDIA
Posts: 775
Good Answers: 67
#12
In reply to #10

Re: Question

05/19/2011 8:58 AM

Is it a question or an answer? If you want to ask whether it is right, then I should say YES.

Reply
Reply to Forum Thread 12 comments

"Almost" Good Answers:

Check out these comments that don't yet have enough votes to be "official" good answers and, if you agree with them, vote them!
Copy to Clipboard

Users who posted comments:

Anonymous Poster (1); ba/ael (1); ducon (3); not so smart (3); ozzb (1); pritam (1); rajeswari (1); The Prof (1)

Previous in Forum: Pressure Vessel - Nozzle Loads   Next in Forum: Nozzle Thickness on Spherical Tank

Advertisement