Power Converter

Power Unit Converter

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Power Unit Conversion Guide

Power is the rate at which energy is transferred or work is done. Different industries use different power units — electrical engineers use watts and kilowatts, mechanical engineers often use horsepower, and HVAC professionals use BTU/hour. Our free power converter handles all the major units with instant results.

Watts and Kilowatts — Electrical Power

The watt (W) is the SI unit of power, defined as one joule per second. It is the standard unit for electrical appliances, light bulbs, solar panels, and grid electricity. Common multiples include the kilowatt (kW = 1,000 W) and the megawatt (MW = 1,000,000 W). Your household electricity bill charges in kilowatt-hours (energy = power × time).

Typical power consumption: a smartphone charger uses 5–20 W; a microwave uses 700–1,200 W (0.7–1.2 kW); a large home air conditioner uses 3–5 kW; a power plant generates hundreds of megawatts.

Horsepower — Mechanical Power

Horsepower (hp) was defined by James Watt in the 18th century to compare steam engine output to the power of draft horses. One mechanical horsepower equals exactly 550 foot-pounds per second, or approximately 745.7 watts. Car engines are rated in horsepower or kilowatts depending on the country. A typical family car has 100–200 hp (75–150 kW).

Note: there are several different definitions of horsepower. This converter uses the mechanical (imperial) horsepower of 745.69987 W, which is the most common in automotive contexts.

BTU/Hour — Heating and Cooling

The British Thermal Unit per hour (BTU/h) is the standard power unit for HVAC systems in the US and UK. Air conditioner capacity is typically stated in BTU/h. One BTU/h ≈ 0.2931 watts. A 12,000 BTU/h air conditioner uses about 3,516 watts (3.5 kW) at maximum capacity.

Megawatts — Grid-Scale Power

Megawatts measure the output of large power generators. A small wind turbine might produce 2–3 MW; a typical nuclear reactor generates 1,000–1,600 MW. Entire cities can run on hundreds of megawatts of generating capacity.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many watts in one horsepower?
One mechanical horsepower equals approximately 745.7 watts. So a 200 hp car engine produces about 149,140 W (149.1 kW) of mechanical power at peak output.
How do I convert kW to horsepower?
Multiply kilowatts by 1.34102 to get mechanical horsepower. For example, 100 kW × 1.34102 = 134.1 hp. Conversely, multiply hp by 0.7457 to get kilowatts.
What is a megawatt in household terms?
One megawatt (1,000 kW) can power approximately 400–1,000 average homes depending on the country and season. A 1 MW solar farm can power a small village. A single nuclear reactor typically produces 500–1,600 MW.
How many BTU/h is 1 kW?
One kilowatt equals approximately 3,412.14 BTU/hour. This conversion is essential when comparing electric and gas heating systems or sizing HVAC equipment where capacity is stated in BTU/h but the electrical supply is measured in kW.
What is the difference between power and energy?
Power is the rate of energy transfer (measured in watts), while energy is the total amount of work done (measured in joules or kWh). A 100 W light bulb running for 10 hours uses 1,000 Wh = 1 kWh of energy. Power tells you how fast; energy tells you how much total.