Horsepower Calculator
Part of Automotive Calculators
Calculate engine horsepower from torque and RPM using the standard horsepower formula. Perfect for dyno analysis and engine performance tuning.
How to Use the Horsepower Calculator
This horsepower calculator uses the standard SAE formula to calculate engine horsepower from torque and RPM measurements. Simply enter your torque reading in pound-feet (lb-ft) and the corresponding engine speed in revolutions per minute (RPM), then click Calculate to get the horsepower output at that specific RPM.
The tool is ideal for analyzing dyno charts, comparing engine performance at different RPM ranges, and understanding the relationship between torque and horsepower. Whether you're tuning a naturally aspirated engine, turbocharged setup, or comparing stock versus modified configurations, this calculator provides accurate horsepower values based on real torque measurements.
Understanding the Horsepower Formula
The horsepower formula HP = (Torque × RPM) / 5,252 is derived from the definition of one horsepower as 550 foot-pounds per second. The constant 5,252 comes from converting this definition to torque in lb-ft and rotational speed in RPM, accounting for the 2π radians in one revolution.
This formula reveals an important relationship: horsepower is simply torque multiplied by rotational speed. An engine producing 300 lb-ft at 5,252 RPM makes exactly 300 horsepower. At lower RPMs, the same torque produces less horsepower, while at higher RPMs, it produces more. This is why horsepower peaks at higher RPM than torque in most engines.
Torque vs Horsepower Explained
Torque is the rotational force produced by the engine, measured in pound-feet (lb-ft). It represents the engine's ability to do work and is what you feel as the engine pulls the vehicle forward. High torque at low RPM gives strong acceleration and pulling power, which is why diesel engines and electric motors feel so responsive. Use our 0-60 calculator to see how torque and horsepower translate to real-world acceleration times.
Horsepower is a measure of how quickly the engine can do work over time. It's calculated from torque and RPM, so it increases as engine speed rises even if torque remains constant. Horsepower determines top speed and high-RPM performance, making it crucial for racing applications where sustained high-speed power matters. The quarter mile calculator shows how horsepower affects drag strip performance.
Practical Applications
- Dyno Analysis: Convert dyno torque readings to horsepower across the RPM range to create complete power curves and identify optimal shift points
- Performance Tuning: Calculate horsepower gains from modifications by measuring torque improvements at various RPM levels
- Engine Comparison: Compare different engines by analyzing their torque and horsepower characteristics throughout their operating range
- Gearing Selection: Determine which gear keeps the engine in its peak horsepower range for maximum acceleration using a gear ratio calculator
- Boost Analysis: For forced induction, calculate horsepower gains at different boost levels by measuring torque increases
Understanding Peak vs Area Under the Curve
While peak horsepower numbers are often quoted, the entire power curve matters more for real-world performance. An engine with 400 HP peak but only 300 HP from 3,000-5,000 RPM will feel slower in daily driving than one with 380 HP peak but 370 HP throughout that same range. This is why area under the curve and power delivery characteristics are crucial for selecting the right engine setup.
When analyzing dyno charts, look at both peak horsepower and where in the RPM range the engine makes power. Broad, flat torque curves that maintain high horsepower across a wide RPM band provide better drivability and performance than peaky engines that only shine at redline. This calculator helps you understand exactly how much horsepower your engine produces at every RPM point where you have torque data.
Common Horsepower Facts
The 5,252 RPM Rule: At exactly 5,252 RPM, horsepower always equals torque numerically. If an engine makes 300 lb-ft at 5,252 RPM, it makes exactly 300 HP at that same point.
Why horsepower rises with RPM: Even if torque drops slightly at high RPM, horsepower can still increase because the engine is spinning faster and doing more work per unit time.
Low-end vs high-end power: Torque-focused engines make more power at low RPM (better for towing and acceleration), while high-revving engines make peak power at high RPM (better for top speed and racing).