Horsepower (Electric) to Joules/hour
hp
J/h
Conversion History
| Conversion | Reuse | Delete |
|---|---|---|
1 hp (Horsepower (Electric)) → 2685599.99999999785152 J/h (Joules/hour) Just now |
Quick Reference Table (Horsepower (Electric) to Joules/hour)
| Horsepower (Electric) (hp) | Joules/hour (J/h) |
|---|---|
| 0.25 | 671,399.99999999946288 |
| 0.5 | 1,342,799.99999999892576 |
| 1 | 2,685,599.99999999785152 |
| 5 | 13,427,999.9999999892576 |
| 10 | 26,855,999.9999999785152 |
| 50 | 134,279,999.999999892576 |
| 100 | 268,559,999.999999785152 |
About Horsepower (Electric) (hp)
Electric horsepower (hp(E)) is defined as exactly 746 watts — a rounded value used in the US for rating electric motors. It is the standard on US electric motor nameplates, pump ratings, and industrial motor specifications. The electric hp is marginally larger than the metric hp (735.5 W) and essentially identical to the mechanical and international hp (745.7 W). When purchasing a motor in the US, the hp rating refers to this electric horsepower definition.
A 1 hp electric motor draws about 746 W of shaft output power (actual electrical draw is higher due to efficiency losses). US pool pumps are typically rated 0.75–2 hp (electric).
About Joules/hour (J/h)
Joules per hour (J/h) is a very low power unit, equivalent to approximately 0.000278 watts. It is used in precision calorimetry, passive building heat loss calculations, and biological heat flux measurements where the energy exchange over hours is more meaningful than per-second rates. One watt equals 3,600 J/h. The unit is occasionally seen in nutrition science and environmental physiology, where energy budgets are tracked over hours.
A sleeping mouse dissipates roughly 720,000 J/h (~200 W/kg) due to its high surface-area-to-volume ratio. A well-insulated house loses about 36,000,000 J/h (10 kW) on a cold winter day.
Horsepower (Electric) – Frequently Asked Questions
Why is electric horsepower exactly 746 watts instead of 745.7?
It's a deliberate rounding for simplicity. The mechanical horsepower is 745.69987... watts — an ugly number for electrical calculations. The electric motor industry rounded to 746 W for clean nameplate ratings and straightforward calculations. The 0.04% difference is far below any motor's manufacturing tolerance. Some standards even use 750 W as an approximation. In practice, the distinction between 745.7 and 746 matters only to standards lawyers and unit conversion pedants.
How do I know the actual electrical draw of a motor rated in hp?
Divide the hp rating by the motor efficiency and power factor. A 5 hp motor at 90% efficiency draws: 5 × 746 / 0.90 = 4,144 W of electrical power to deliver 3,730 W of shaft power. For three-phase motors, also divide by (√3 × voltage × power factor) to get amperage. Real-world efficiency ranges from 75% for small motors to 96% for large premium-efficiency ones. The nameplate always shows shaft output, not electrical input — a common source of confusion.
Why do US pool pumps still use horsepower ratings?
Because American homeowners and pool contractors have decades of experience sizing pumps in hp: "a 20,000-gallon pool needs a 1.5 hp pump" is ingrained knowledge. The Department of Energy actually mandated variable-speed pool pumps in 2021 and encouraged watt-based efficiency ratings, but manufacturers still prominently display hp because it drives purchasing decisions. A customer choosing between a 1 hp and 1.5 hp pump understands the difference intuitively; 746 W vs 1,119 W means nothing to them.
What is the difference between hp(E) and NEMA motor ratings?
NEMA (National Electrical Manufacturers Association) defines standard motor sizes using electric hp: 1/4, 1/3, 1/2, 3/4, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 5, 7.5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 40, 50, 60, 75, 100 hp and up. These are standardized frame sizes — a 5 hp motor from any manufacturer fits the same mounting bolts. The hp(E) rating is the shaft output; NEMA also specifies efficiency classes (IE1 through IE4) that determine how much electrical power the motor actually consumes.
Are electric car motors rated in electric horsepower?
Not usually. EV manufacturers rate motors in kilowatts because the electrical connection is obvious and kW is internationally understood. A Tesla Model 3 motor is listed as 211 kW, not "283 hp(E)." However, marketing materials often convert to hp for American consumers: "283 horsepower" sounds sportier. Interestingly, EV motors are far more efficient (90–97%) than combustion engines (25–40%), so a 200 hp EV motor consumes far less total energy than a 200 hp gasoline engine.
Joules/hour – Frequently Asked Questions
Why use joules per hour instead of just watts?
When you're tracking energy budgets over hours — passive house heat loss, slow battery self-discharge, biological calorimetry — expressing rates in J/h matches the timescale of your measurements. A passive house losing 36 MJ/h is more intuitive to a building physicist than "10 kW" because they're calculating daily heat budgets in megajoules. It's a unit of convenience, not necessity.
How does joules per hour relate to kilowatt-hours?
One kWh = 3,600,000 J, so 3,600,000 J/h = 1 kW. The relationship is elegantly circular: if you consume 3.6 MJ/h of power, you use exactly 1 kWh of energy each hour. This makes J/h a natural bridge unit between the SI energy world (joules) and the practical electricity billing world (kWh). Multiply J/h by hours and you get joules of total energy; divide by 3,600,000 and you get kWh.
What is the heat loss of a well-insulated building in joules per hour?
A Passivhaus-certified building targets heat loss below 54 MJ/h (15 W/m² × 1,000 m² for a typical house). A standard older home might lose 180–360 MJ/h (50–100 kW) on a cold day. The difference is dramatic: triple glazing, 300mm insulation, and air-tightness can reduce heat loss by 80%. Building energy certificates in some countries express this in kWh/m²/year, but the underlying calculation uses J/h or W.
How many joules per hour does a human radiate while sleeping?
About 230,000–290,000 J/h (65–80 W). This drops from your waking basal rate of ~290,000–360,000 J/h (80–100 W) because metabolic rate falls 10–15% during sleep. The heat warms your bed and room measurably — two people sleeping together can raise bedroom temperature by 1–2°C overnight in a small, well-insulated room. It's why you wake up warm even without the heating on.
Is J/h used in any standards or building codes?
Not directly — most building codes use watts per square meter (W/m²) or kWh/m²/year for energy performance ratings. However, the underlying heat transfer calculations in standards like ISO 13790 effectively compute in J/h when assessing hourly energy balances. Some German and Swiss engineering tools output intermediate results in kJ/h or MJ/h. The unit lives in the calculation layer, even if the final certificate uses more familiar units.