What's The Difference Between BHP, HP, kW and PS?

Manufacturers can often pick and choose between power units, so here's a low-down of what they all equate to
What's The Difference Between BHP, HP, kW and PS?

Power units are always the headline figures associated with any new performance car and can provide interesting comparisons between cars across the entire spectrum of automotive production.

Power as an entity is a measure of how quickly and how far an engine can force the car forward, with that force being the torque produced from the internal combustion. This is generalised in engineering as the amount of ‘work’ the car has to do to propel itself along and has taken many forms since the early days of internal combustion. Generally divided into three main units used in different areas across the globe, let’s delve into what each unit of measurement means and how they compare to each other.

Kilowatts

What's The Difference Between BHP, HP, kW and PS?

1kW = 1.341hp

Technically, this form of measurement is the most uniform method of measuring power and is used by every engineer worldwide. Watts are an SI unit (International System) which means they are based around the metre, kilogram, joule and second that make up the metric system. It is a measurement of energy transfer over time, which is the exact job that an internal combustion engine undertakes.

Used as a unit for cars mostly in the Southern Hemisphere, Kilowatts can be measured by finding the torque value from the wheels on a rolling road, followed by applying this equation:

What's The Difference Between BHP, HP, kW and PS?

Kilowatts are a modern take on car power output and I wouldn’t be surprised if it becomes the norm to use this form in Europe, although it may take a lot more to persuade Americans to make the transition.

Although considering the rise of the electric car, it would make a whole tonne of sense to start switching, as the capabilities of electric motors are measured using kWh (Kilowatt hours) which dictates how long the electric motors can produce a certain amount of power for.

Horsepower

What's The Difference Between BHP, HP, kW and PS?

Created by the master of the steam engine – Mr James Watt – this unit of power has somehow still survived to this day as the staple unit of power measurement of new cars where I’m from. Horsepower was deemed equivalent to a horse moving 33,000 pounds of mass one foot in one minute. Now no one knows how big this horse was or whether it was a particularly healthy horse or not…but let’s just go with it. This new-found unit allowed Watt to show direct comparisons between his steam locomotives and the common horse that dominated the haulage business up until the invention of the steam engine.

Horsepower still survives as the main power unit for us petrolheads in the UK and you lot over in the USA, staving off any outside influences from Continental Europe and Australasia. Again, this power unit can be found by a torque translation using a similar equation to that of the Watt:

It may start off as a bit of a mess, but this equation simplifies down to something very similar to that of the Watt equation
It may start off as a bit of a mess, but this equation simplifies down to…

Horsepower can become a tricky business however, with values measured in different ways. BHP (brake horsepower) refers to the equipment needed to test the engines for their power outputs, with a large drum with a water brake within it measuring the braking force once the engine is spinning at a desired rate. Over in the US, this is measured with only some ancillary components attached to the powertrain, missing things like the power steering pump which would lead to a lack of parasitic losses if in place. Therefore higher ‘HP’ figures are calculated in the US than the BHP figures calculated in Europe where every component is kept in place.

WHP or wheel-horsepower is a greater indicator of the usable power that an engine produces, as this is calculated using the exact torque that has made it through the drivetrain and is driving the wheels.

PS

What's The Difference Between BHP, HP, kW and PS?

1PS = 0.986hp

PS stands for pferdestärke which translates simply as horsepower, but it has had some metric tweaking to try and bring good old HP forward into the 21st Century. This metric horsepower has been adopted throughout Europe as the new standard for power measurement and will probably make its way fully into the UK psyche in the not too distant future.

The official engineering standard for metric horsepower is the amount of power needed to lift a 75kg of mass one metre vertically in one second, which – once the conversions from imperial to metric are applied – equates to a 1.4 per cent higher figure than the old imperial units. Manufacturers will often pick and choose between PS and HP depending on whatever figure seems more rounded and presentable. Although I’ve always just seen PS as ‘horsepower plus a few’.

To summarise these three units of power, let’s break down famous cars and their relevant figures to put the new and old units into perspective:

Nissan Skyline GTR R34: 206kW = 276hp = 280PS (advertised)

What's The Difference Between BHP, HP, kW and PS?

McLaren 570S: 419kW = 562hp = 570PS

What's The Difference Between BHP, HP, kW and PS?

Honda Civic Type-R FK2: 228kW = 306hp = 310PS

What's The Difference Between BHP, HP, kW and PS?

Bugatti Chiron: 1,103kW = 1,479hp = 1500PS

What's The Difference Between BHP, HP, kW and PS?

What power measurement do you use? Are you an old-school horsepower fan or have you converted to the modern way of thinking with PS or even Kilowatts? Comment below with your thoughts on the matter!

Comments

KP Drifter

hp

03/29/2017 - 13:11 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Smiles per mile is my metric system

03/29/2017 - 15:09 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

In holland we (as far as i know) have always been using Ps (Pk in dutch) and sometimes Kw for the more enthusiastic or industrial branch.

Never knew the americans based it on a horse pulling a stone over a foots distance.
Must be the same logic with measuring in barlycorns.. 😚

03/29/2017 - 20:02 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

though my country uses the metric system, when it comes to car’s power output, i prefer to use horsepower. Firstly, cuz “horsepower” sounds way cooler than “kilowatt”, and secondly because the HP-figure of a car is far larger than the KW-figure, so it just makes it sound more impressive - Bugatti Veyron =740KW=1001HP.

03/30/2017 - 07:52 |
2 | 0
Christian 2

Im in Australia and think KW is absolute bullshit. I dont get it at all. Ive always used hp and pound foot for power meassurments.

03/30/2017 - 09:40 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

The difference has been illustrated more properly and we can learn many new things out of that which might be the reason of this thing and many people can learn new techniques of this thing and they may implement this as well as I have implemented on https://www.autorod.com/

01/23/2018 - 15:14 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Oh man, This page is so much better than Jalopnik will ever be, What a scheiße show of whiny snowflakes.

I use HP cuz ‘MURICA! But I think we should change it to FU or FREEDOM UNITS.

12/10/2018 - 01:04 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

When I was a kid, I had a poster of Sophia Loren on my wall and didn’t care much about horsepower. Now that I’m older, I a poster of a Bugatti next to Sophia’s poster.

01/13/2020 - 04:35 |
0 | 0
Erlend 1

so bhp is wheel hp?

03/12/2020 - 14:55 |
0 | 0

No, BHP is the power the engine produces alone. When connecting it to the flywheel transmission etc and all the way to the wheels there will be losses per physics and thus the power will be lower. So BHP always higher than WHP because less parts turning by measurement method.

04/21/2021 - 09:21 |
0 | 0

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