Convert Mechanical Horsepower to Volt-Ampere (hp → VA)
Horsepower is the American and British unit for car engines, motorcycles, and traditional mechanical power ratings.
Mechanical Horsepower to Volt-Ampere Conversion Table
10 common values| Mechanical Horsepower | Volt-Ampere |
|---|---|
| 1 hp | 745.69987 VA |
| 5 hp | 3,728.4994 VA |
| 10 hp | 7,456.9987 VA |
| 50 hp | 37,284.994 VA |
| 100 hp | 74,569.987 VA |
| 500 hp | 372,849.94 VA |
| 1,000 hp | 745,699.87 VA |
| 5,000 hp | 3,728,499.4 VA |
| 10,000 hp | 7,456,998.7 VA |
| 50,000 hp | 37,284,994 VA |
How to Convert Mechanical Horsepower to Volt-Ampere Manually
Step by StepConverting mechanical horsepower to volt-amperes is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in mechanical horsepowerStart with the number of mechanical horsepower (hp) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 745.69987The conversion factor from hp to VA is 745.69987. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in volt-amperesThe result is your value in volt-amperes (VA).
Formula
Multiply the value in mechanical horsepower by 745.69987. For the reverse direction, multiply by 0.001341.
VA = hp × 745.69987hp = VA × 0.001341Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 hp = 745.7 W = 0.7457 kW.
- US car ads quote hp; European ads quote kW or PS.
- Metric horsepower (PS) differs by ~1.4% — be aware.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Assuming hp and PS are identical — 1.4% difference.
- Using horsepower for electrical devices — watts more appropriate.
- Confusing horsepower at engine flywheel vs wheel (transmission losses).
About Mechanical Horsepower and Volt-Ampere
What is the Mechanical Horsepower?
Horsepower (hp) equals exactly 745.6998715822702 watts (mechanical horsepower) and is the American and British unit for car engines, motorcycles, motorboats, and traditional mechanical power ratings. James Watt invented the unit in the 1780s to market his steam engines: he calculated that a brewery horse could continuously turn a mill wheel at 33,000 ft·lb per minute, which became 1 horsepower. American cars typically range from 150 hp (economy) to 700 hp (sports cars), pickup trucks 250–500 hp, and large diesel trucks 400–600 hp. Outside the US, the metric horsepower (PS or CV, equal to 735.5 W — about 1.4% smaller than mechanical hp) is sometimes used. Horsepower relates to the watt (1 hp ≈ 745.7 W), the kilowatt (1 hp ≈ 0.746 kW), and the metric horsepower (1 hp ≈ 1.014 PS). Despite SI's preference for the watt, horsepower remains entrenched in automotive marketing.
- US car and motorcycle engine ratings
- Lawn mower and small engine specs
- US pump and compressor ratings
Base Ford Mustang: ~310 hp. Lawn mower: 5 hp. Average car: 150–200 hp.
What is the Volt-Ampere?
The volt-ampere (VA) is the SI unit of apparent power in alternating-current (AC) electrical systems. Equal to volts times amperes, the VA represents the magnitude of power flowing in an AC circuit before accounting for the phase relationship between voltage and current. For purely resistive loads (incandescent bulbs, heaters), 1 VA = 1 W. For reactive loads (motors, transformers, fluorescent lights), the apparent power (VA) is larger than the real power (W) because of the phase shift — the ratio is the 'power factor.' Transformers, UPS units, and generators are rated in VA or kVA (kilo-VA) because they must handle the apparent power, not just the real power. A typical home UPS for a desktop computer is 600–1,500 VA. The VA relates to the watt (1 VA = 1 W only at unity power factor), the kilovolt-ampere (1 kVA = 1,000 VA), and the megavolt-ampere (1 MVA = 10⁶ VA — used in utility-scale transformers).
- Transformer sizing
- Uninterruptible power supply (UPS) ratings
- Generator capacity
Home UPS: 600–1500 VA. Transformer: kVA ratings. Motor power factor typically 0.8 — 1 kW motor = 1.25 kVA.