No.
Horsepower (hp) and revolutions per minute (rpm) are related but not directly convertible without additional information, such as the torque of the motor. Specifically, 1 horsepower is equivalent to 5252 foot-pounds per minute when torque is expressed in foot-pounds. To find the rpm for a 2 hp motor, you would need to know the torque; the formula is: hp = (torque in lb-ft × rpm) / 5252. Thus, without the torque value, you cannot directly calculate rpm from horsepower.
I believe that is the maximum horsepower and torque and at what RPM they occur
Torque 425 @ 2000 RPM; Horsepower 215 @ 3000 RPM
RPM (revolutions per minute) is a measure of rotational speed and does not directly indicate power. Power is typically measured in watts, horsepower, or other units and is calculated using torque and rotational speed. To determine the power at 5000 RPM, you would need to know the torque applied at that speed, using the formula: Power (W) = Torque (Nm) × RPM × (2π/60). Without torque information, the power output cannot be determined from RPM alone.
torque is at low rpm, horse power is at higher rpm. as you gain hp, you lose torque and vice versa.
horsepower : 200@ 5200 rpm torque : 225@ 4000 rpm
"Peak Torque" is RPM of engine that produces the most torque. For example the 'peak torque' on a Ford 6.0L Powerstroke Diesel is 570 ft-lbs@ 2000 rpm. In an engine, especially a diesel, higher rpm does not necessarily mean more torque. Fact is, it drops at a higher rpm than 2000.
Not that easy. HP is basically torque and RPM together, so you need RPM too to get HP.
225 horsepower at 4200 RPM and 300 lb/ft torque at 3200 RPM
Horsepower is calculated from RPM and torque. The higher the RPM you can sustain an engines torque at, the higher the Horsepower. Horsepower and Torque are always the same amount at 5250 RPM with all but diesel powered engines. Also the more rotational mass you can spin at a higher rpm, the more energy it poseses.
450 torque is approx. 260 HP for an engine turning at 3050 RPM or 308 HP for and engine turning 3600 RPM, based on the formula ......torque X rpm/5252 = HP
225 horsepower at 4200 RPM and 300 ft-lbs torque at 3200 RPM