Horsepower is a measure of power, the metric unit of power is the watt. One watt is one joule per second.
Watts and horsepower are both units of power.
I horsepower equals 1/315th of 315 horsepower
Yes, that is correct.
No - just different units. (1 hp = 746 watts)
You don't. The units measure different things.
You can not equate these two units.
Watts (W) and horsepower (hp) are two common units of power. The watt is the standard unit used in the International System of Units (SI), while horsepower is a non-metric unit commonly used for rating the output of engines.
-- watt -- kilowatt -- joule per second -- horsepower
You're trying to convert mechanical force to voltage, and that doesn't work the way you think it does. The voltage doesn't change on account of the truck's horsepower - that's the alternator and voltage regulator which supplies electrical current.
No, horsepower is not an SI (International System of Units) unit. It is a unit of power used predominantly in the United States and some other countries to measure the rate at which work is done.
"Yes, it can. But some units will not convert to others such as KWH into horsepower, as they deal with slightly different things. KWH is energy and horsepower is power, so that won't work"
There is no direct conversion between horsepower (hp) and British thermal units (BTU). Horsepower is a unit of power representing the rate at which work is done, while BTU is a unit of energy. The two are not directly interchangeable without additional information or context.