Horsepower to Erg per Second Converter

Convert horsepower to erg/s with our free online power converter.

Quick Answer

1 Horsepower = 7456998715.822702 erg/s

Formula: Horsepower × conversion factor = Erg per Second

Use the calculator below for instant, accurate conversions.

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All conversion formulas on UnitsConverter.io have been verified against NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) guidelines and international SI standards. Our calculations are accurate to 10 decimal places for standard conversions and use arbitrary precision arithmetic for astronomical units.

Last verified: February 2026Reviewed by: Sam Mathew, Software Engineer

Horsepower to Erg per Second Calculator

How to Use the Horsepower to Erg per Second Calculator:

  1. Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Horsepower).
  2. The converted value in Erg per Second will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
  3. Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Power category.
  4. Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
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How to Convert Horsepower to Erg per Second: Step-by-Step Guide

Converting Horsepower to Erg per Second involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.

Formula:

erg/s = hp × 7457000000

Example Calculation:

1 hp = 7456998715.822702 erg/s

Disclaimer: For Reference Only

These conversion results are provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, we make no guarantees regarding the precision of these results, especially for conversions involving extremely large or small numbers which may be subject to the inherent limitations of standard computer floating-point arithmetic.

Not for professional use. Results should be verified before use in any critical application. View our Terms of Service for more information.

What is a Horsepower and a Erg per Second?

The Original Experiment

James Watt didn't just guess. He observed horses working in coal mines, lifting coal up a shaft using a pulley system.

  1. A horse could pull with a force of 180 pounds.
  2. It walked in a circle with a 24-foot diameter (approx 75.4 ft circumference).
  3. It completed the circle about 2.5 times per minute.

$$ \text{Work} = \text{Force} \times \text{Distance} $$ $$ \text{Power} = \frac{\text{Work}}{\text{Time}} $$

$$ 180 \text{ lbs} \times (24 \text{ ft} \times \pi \times 2.5) \approx 32,572 \frac{\text{ft}\cdot\text{lb}}{\text{min}} $$

Watt rounded this up to 33,000 ft⋅lb/min to be safe. Dividing by 60 seconds gives the classic definition: 1 hp = 550 ft⋅lb/s

Types of Horsepower

The world couldn't agree on just one "horsepower," so we have several:

1. Mechanical Horsepower (Imperial)

  • Symbol: hp, hp(I)
  • Value: 745.69987158227022 Watts
  • Definition: 550 ft⋅lb/s
  • Where used: USA, UK, Commonwealth countries. This is what you see on a Ford Mustang spec sheet.

2. Metric Horsepower (Pferdestärke)

  • Symbol: PS, cv, ch, pk, ks
  • Value: 735.49875 Watts
  • Definition: The power to lift 75 kg by 1 meter in 1 second.
    • $75 \text{ kg} \times 9.80665 \text{ m/s}^2 \times 1 \text{ m/s} = 735.5 \text{ W}$
  • Where used: Europe, Asia, South America.
    • German: Pferdestärke (PS)
    • French: Cheval-vapeur (ch)
    • Italian: Cavallo vapore (cv)
  • Difference: Metric hp is about 1.4% smaller than Imperial hp. A 500 hp car is 507 PS.

3. Electrical Horsepower

  • Symbol: hp(E)
  • Value: 746 Watts (Exactly)
  • Definition: Used for rating electric motors to simplify calculations.

4. Boiler Horsepower

  • Symbol: bhp
  • Value: 9,809.5 Watts (~13.1 mechanical hp)
  • Definition: The power required to evaporate 34.5 lbs of water into steam in one hour at 212°F.
  • Where used: Industrial steam boilers and power plants. Warning: Do not confuse this with Brake Horsepower (bhp)!

5. Hydraulic Horsepower

  • Definition: Power available within a hydraulic system.
  • Formula: $\text{hp} = \frac{\text{Pressure (psi)} \times \text{Flow (gpm)}}{1714}$
  • Where used: Heavy machinery, drilling rigs.

1 erg/s = 10^-7 W = 0.0000001 W = 0.0000000001 kW

Erg definition: 1 erg = 1 dyne⋅cm = 10^-7 joules

Note: The Horsepower is part of the imperial/US customary system, primarily used in the US, UK, and Canada for everyday measurements. The Erg per Second belongs to the imperial/US customary system.

History of the Horsepower and Erg per Second

: The Marketing Genius of James Watt

The term "horsepower" is arguably the most successful marketing slogan in engineering history.

The Problem: In the late 1700s, the Industrial Revolution was just starting. Mines were flooded with water, and owners used teams of horses to drive pumps. James Watt had invented a vastly superior steam engine, but he had a hard time explaining how much better it was. Saying "it produces 20,000 foot-pounds per minute" meant nothing to a mine boss.

The Solution: Watt spoke their language. He calculated what one of their horses could do, then rated his engine in "horses." "This engine will replace 10 of your horses." Suddenly, the value proposition was clear. The mine owner could calculate the cost of feeding and housing 10 horses versus buying one engine.

The Irony: Watt actually overestimated the power of a horse.

  • A typical horse can sustain about 0.7 hp for a full day.
  • Watt's "1 hp" (33,000 ft-lb/min) is actually a grueling pace that a horse can only maintain for a few hours.
  • By defining the unit as stronger than a real horse, Watt ensured his customers were never disappointed. If they bought a "5 hp" engine, it would easily outwork 5 real horses.

Common Uses and Applications: horsepower vs erg/s

Explore the typical applications for both Horsepower (imperial/US) and Erg per Second (imperial/US) to understand their common contexts.

Common Uses for horsepower

1. Automotive Industry

This is the domain of the horsepower. Despite the world moving to metric (kW), car enthusiasts and manufacturers in the US, UK, and even Europe still heavily market "HP" or "PS."

  • BHP (Brake Horsepower): The power measured at the engine's crankshaft (before losses in the transmission). This is the number in the brochure.
  • WHP (Wheel Horsepower): The power that actually reaches the tires. Usually 15-20% less than BHP due to friction in the gears and axles.

2. Aviation

  • Piston Engines: Small planes (Cessna 172) are rated in hp (e.g., Lycoming O-320 is 160 hp).
  • Turboprops: Often rated in Shaft Horsepower (shp).
  • Jet Engines: Rated in Thrust (lbs or kN), not horsepower. However, you can calculate "equivalent horsepower" based on speed, though it varies wildly.

3. Home Appliances

  • Garbage Disposal: 1/3 hp to 1 hp.
  • Garage Door Opener: 1/2 hp to 1.25 hp.
  • Blender: "2 Peak HP" (Marketing term—usually means the motor would produce that right before it burns out).
  • Air Conditioner: Historically rated in hp, now mostly BTU/h or Tons. (1 hp $\approx$ 9000 BTU/h in cooling capacity, roughly).

4. Electric Motors

Industrial motors are strictly rated in hp (US) or kW (Global).

  • 1 hp motor: Runs a small conveyor or drill press.
  • 10 hp motor: Runs a large industrial fan or compressor.
  • 100+ hp motor: Runs municipal water pumps or rock crushers.

When to Use erg/s

Astrophysics: Stellar luminosity, cosmic ray power, radiation output. Older Literature: Pre-1960 physics textbooks, historical research. Spectroscopy: Radiation intensity in some fields. Academic: Teaching unit systems, dimensional analysis.

Additional Unit Information

About Horsepower (hp)

Does a horse actually have 1 horsepower?

No!

  • Sustained: A healthy horse can sustain exactly 1 hp (Watt's definition) for a few hours, or about 0.7 hp for a full work day.
  • Peak: In a full gallop or jump, a horse can produce 14.9 hp.
  • Human: A human can produce 1 hp for about 10-15 seconds (sprinting up stairs).

What is "Brake Horsepower" (bhp)?

Bhp is the power measured at the engine's output shaft using a device called a "brake" (dynamometer) to hold the engine speed steady. It measures the engine's raw power before it goes through the gearbox, alternator, power steering pump, and differential. Wheel Horsepower (whp) is what actually hits the road, which is usually 15% lower than bhp.

Why do electric cars have "Horsepower"?

Electric motors produce power (Watts). However, to make them comparable to gas cars for consumers, manufacturers convert the kW rating to hp.

  • Tesla Model 3 Performance: 450 hp.
  • Actually: ~340 kW. Electric horsepower is technically defined as exactly 746 W, but for marketing, the conversion 1 kW = 1.341 hp is used.

What is "Tax Horsepower" (CV)?

In countries like France (CV) and the UK (RAC hp), cars used to be taxed based on a formula involving cylinder bore diameter, not actual power.

  • Citroën 2CV: Named "Deux Chevaux" (Two Horses).
  • Actual Power: 9 hp (early models) to 29 hp.
  • Tax Rating: 2 CV. This system led to engines with long strokes and small bores to cheat the taxman.

Can I convert Thrust to Horsepower?

Not directly. Thrust is force; Horsepower is power (force $\times$ speed).

  • A jet engine at a standstill produces 0 hp (because distance moved is 0), but massive thrust.
  • At 600 mph, that same thrust produces massive horsepower.
  • Approx Formula: $\text{hp} = \frac{\text{Thrust (lbs)} \times \text{Speed (mph)}}{375}$

What is the most powerful machine ever built?

The Saturn V rocket.

  • First stage thrust: 7.6 million pounds.

  • Speed at burnout: 6,000 mph.

  • Peak Power: ~160,000,000 horsepower. That's equivalent to about 500,000 Corvettes taking off at once.

  • Dynamometer (Dyno): A device used to measure force, torque, and power.

  • Indicated Horsepower (ihp): Theoretical power calculated from gas pressure in the cylinders (ignoring friction).

  • Friction Horsepower (fhp): Power lost to friction within the engine. (ihp - bhp = fhp).

  • Shaft Horsepower (shp): Power delivered to a propeller shaft (ships/airplanes).

  • Specific Power: Power per unit of displacement (e.g., "100 hp per liter").

  • Power-to-Weight Ratio: Horsepower divided by vehicle weight. The #1 predictor of acceleration.

About Erg per Second (erg/s)

How do I convert erg/s to watts?

Formula: W = erg/s × 10^-7 (or erg/s ÷ 10,000,000)

Examples:

  • 10^7 erg/s = 1 W
  • 10^8 erg/s = 10 W
  • 10^10 erg/s = 1,000 W = 1 kW
  • 10^13 erg/s = 1,000,000 W = 1 MW

erg/s to Watts converter →

Why do astrophysicists use erg/s for stars?

Historical: Astrophysics literature established with CGS units (pre-1960) Large numbers: 10^33 erg/s easier to write than 10^26 W in some contexts Convention: Astronomical journals still accept erg/s Transition: Modern papers increasingly use watts or solar luminosity units

Solar luminosity unit (L☉):

  • 1 L☉ = 3.828 × 10^26 W = 3.828 × 10^33 erg/s

Example: Sirius = 25 L☉ = 9.7 × 10^27 W = 9.7 × 10^34 erg/s

How do I convert between erg/s and J/s (watts)?

Relationship: 1 erg = 10^-7 joules

Therefore: 1 erg/s = 10^-7 J/s = 10^-7 W

Examples:

  • 10,000,000 erg/s = 1 J/s = 1 W
  • 10^10 erg/s = 1,000 J/s = 1 kW
  • 3.828 × 10^33 erg/s = 3.828 × 10^26 W (Sun)

What is the Sun's power output?

In different units:

  • Watts: 3.828 × 10^26 W
  • erg/s: 3.828 × 10^33 erg/s
  • Joules/s: 3.828 × 10^26 J/s
  • Horsepower: 5.13 × 10^23 hp

Perspective:

  • Earth receives: ~1.74 × 10^17 W (1.74 × 10^24 erg/s)
  • Only ~0.00000005% of Sun's total output
  • Sun converts ~4 million tons of mass to energy per second (E=mc²)

Why transition from CGS to SI units?

SI advantages:

  • Universal: Works across all fields (not just mechanics)
  • Electrical compatibility: Watts naturally link mechanical and electrical power
  • Simpler prefixes: kW, MW, GW easier than 10^10, 10^13, 10^16 erg/s
  • International standard: Adopted globally since 1960

CGS still used: Some specialized fields (astrophysics, Gaussian units for E&M)

Modern trend: Even astrophysics journals increasingly accept SI units (watts, joules).

Conversion Table: Horsepower to Erg per Second

Horsepower (hp)Erg per Second (erg/s)
0.53,728,499,357.911
17,456,998,715.823
1.511,185,498,073.734
214,913,997,431.645
537,284,993,579.114
1074,569,987,158.227
25186,424,967,895.568
50372,849,935,791.135
100745,699,871,582.27
2501,864,249,678,955.676
5003,728,499,357,911.352
1,0007,456,998,715,822.703

People Also Ask

How do I convert Horsepower to Erg per Second?

To convert Horsepower to Erg per Second, enter the value in Horsepower in the calculator above. The conversion will happen automatically. Use our free online converter for instant and accurate results. You can also visit our power converter page to convert between other units in this category.

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What is the conversion factor from Horsepower to Erg per Second?

The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Horsepower and Erg per Second. You can find the exact conversion formula and factor on this page. Our calculator handles all calculations automatically. See the conversion table above for common values.

Can I convert Erg per Second back to Horsepower?

Yes! You can easily convert Erg per Second back to Horsepower by using the swap button (⇌) in the calculator above, or by visiting our Erg per Second to Horsepower converter page. You can also explore other power conversions on our category page.

Learn more →

What are common uses for Horsepower and Erg per Second?

Horsepower and Erg per Second are both standard units used in power measurements. They are commonly used in various applications including engineering, construction, cooking, and scientific research. Browse our power converter for more conversion options.

For more power conversion questions, visit our FAQ page or explore our conversion guides.

All Power Conversions

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Verified Against Authority Standards

All conversion formulas have been verified against international standards and authoritative sources to ensure maximum accuracy and reliability.

NIST Reference on Constants, Units and Uncertainty

National Institute of Standards and TechnologyFundamental physical constants and unit conversions

BIPM SI Units

Bureau International des Poids et MesuresInternational System of Units (SI) definitions and standards

ISO 80000

International Organization for StandardizationQuantities and units international standards series

Last verified: February 19, 2026