There is no definite answer to this question, without knowing the weight. For example, if you put a 300 horsepower engine on the Sears tower, the building would not move at all. But if you put a 300 horsepower engine on an ant, the resulting speed would be very high. If you want your mid-size sedan to go 100 mph (e.g. Altima) you would need less horsepower than having your SUV (e.g. Escalade) do 100.
If you have a definite weight to a car you can find how fast it can go here:
http://www.wallaceracing.com/et-hp-mph.php
1 yps = 3600 yph = 3600/1760 mph = 2.045 mph
Multiply mph by 0.00045 to get km per second.
None. Speed and horsepower measure different things.
not sure on horsepower but stock speed in 165-170 mph top
Ha Ha. two different measurements. Horsepower is a measurement of the torque your engine can produce, MPH is a measurement of speed. It is true you need horsepower to generate speed (MPH), and you can calculate the torque required if you have all the factors such as weight, air resistance, friction with road surface, etc.
257 MPH, plus 1,001 Horsepower.
The maximum horsepower of the KTM 525 is 51.5 horsepower. As per the KTM 525 website, the horsepower could range from 48-52 hp. A KTM 525 can go upwards of 70 mph.
The 250sx has about 47 hp and does 71 mph (stock).
How much horsepower on a 92 Honda Accord going 70 mph on flat road and no wind the motor is 1.6 liter and a 4 cylinder
You cant - horsepower is a measure of power and miles per hour is a measure of velocity
10
Sorry- but there is no direct correlation of horsepower to speed. A large bulldozer may have a 1,000 horsepower engine, but only move at a top speed of 10 mph. A drag racer with a 1,000 horsepower engine may move at 300 mph. It comes back to the gearing, torque of the engine, weight and streamlining of the vehicle. A 500 HP sports car might have a top speed of 160 mph.