All the Tools You Need

Power Calculator - Free Online Tool

Power Calculator

Calculate electrical, mechanical, or thermal power using different formulas
Calculated Power
600 W
Using: P = V × I
In Watts
600 W
In Kilowatts
0.6 kW
In Horsepower
0.804 HP
Power Calculation Formulas
P = V × I
P: Power in Watts (W)
V: Voltage in Volts (V)
I: Current in Amperes (A)
Other formulas: P = V²/R = I²R (DC), P = VIcosφ (AC), P = Fv (mechanical)
People Also Ask
🤔 What's the difference between Watts, kW, and HP?
Watts (W) = base SI unit, Kilowatts (kW) = 1,000W, Horsepower (HP) = 745.7W. Use W for small appliances, kW for homes/cars, HP for engines/motors.
🔍 How to calculate power from voltage and resistance?
Use P = V²/R (if voltage known) or P = I²R (if current known). Example: 12V across 6Ω → P = 12²/6 = 144/6 = 24W.
⚡ What is power factor in AC circuits?
Power factor (cosφ) = ratio of real power to apparent power. Range: 0 to 1. Low PF = inefficient, causes higher current for same power.
📏 How much power does a typical house use?
Average US home: 1.2-1.5 kW continuous, 10-15 kW peak. Monthly: 900 kWh = 1.25 kW average. Large AC: 3-5 kW, LED bulb: 10W, TV: 100W, Oven: 2-3 kW.
🎯 How to convert mechanical to electrical power?
Multiply by efficiency (η): P_elec = η × P_mech. Typical generator: 85-95% efficient. 100 HP engine → 74.6 kW mech → ~71 kW elec at 95% efficiency.
🔥 What's the difference between power and energy?
Power = rate of energy use (Watts = Joules/sec). Energy = total consumption (kWh = power × time). Example: 100W bulb × 10h = 1 kWh energy.
What is a Power Calculator?

A Power Calculator computes the rate of energy transfer or conversion in various systems. Power, measured in Watts (W), represents how quickly work is done or energy is transferred. This calculator handles electrical power (P=VI), mechanical power (P=Fv), thermal power (P=Q/t), and AC power calculations for engineers, electricians, and physics students.

Why Calculate Power?

Power calculations are essential for sizing electrical components, designing mechanical systems, estimating energy consumption, and optimizing efficiency. Understanding power requirements prevents overloads, reduces energy costs, and ensures system reliability in everything from circuit design to industrial machinery.

Common applications of power calculations:

  • Electrical Design: Sizing wires, circuit breakers, transformers
  • Energy Management: Calculating electricity bills, solar panel sizing
  • Mechanical Engineering: Motor selection, gearbox design
  • HVAC Systems: Heating/cooling capacity calculations
  • Renewable Energy: Wind turbine, hydroelectric power estimation
How to Use This Calculator

Our power calculator supports five calculation modes with automatic unit conversion:

Five Calculation Types:
  1. Electrical Power (DC): P = V × I, P = V²/R, P = I²R
  2. Mechanical Power: P = F × v (linear), P = τ × ω (rotational)
  3. Thermal Power: P = Q / t (heat transfer rate)
  4. AC Power (Single Phase): P = V × I × cosφ (real power)
  5. 3-Phase Power: P = √3 × VL × IL × cosφ

Automatic features:

  • Smart formula selection: Uses appropriate formula based on inputs
  • Complete unit conversion: W, kW, MW, HP, BTU/hr, cal/s
  • Real-time calculation: Updates as you type or change units
  • Multiple outputs: Shows power in all common units simultaneously
Power Units Conversion Reference

Different fields use different power units. Here's a comprehensive conversion table:

UnitSymbolEquivalent to WattsCommon UsageExample Values
WattW1 WSI unit, electronics, physicsLED bulb: 10W, Laptop: 65W
KilowattkW1,000 WHomes, appliances, carsHair dryer: 1.5kW, House: 5kW
HorsepowerHP745.7 WEngines, motors, mechanicalCar engine: 150HP, Lawn mower: 5HP
BTU/hourBTU/hr0.2931 WHVAC, heating systemsAC unit: 12,000 BTU/hr = 3.5kW
Ton of RefrigerationTR3,517 WAir conditioningCentral AC: 3-5 TR
Calorie/secondcal/s4.184 WNutrition, metabolismHuman at rest: 1.2 cal/s = 5W
Quick Conversions:

1 kW = 1.341 HP, 1 HP = 0.7457 kW, 1 W = 3.412 BTU/hr, 1 BTU/hr = 0.2931 W. Use our calculator for exact conversions.

Common Questions & Solutions

Below are answers to frequently asked questions about power calculations:

Electrical Power Calculations
How do I calculate power for AC vs DC circuits?

AC and DC power calculations differ due to phase relationships in alternating current:

AC vs DC Power Comparison:
Circuit TypePower FormulaNotesExample
DCP = V × ISimple multiplication12V × 2A = 24W
AC ResistiveP = Vrms × IrmsUse RMS values120V × 5A = 600W
AC Inductive/CapacitiveP = VIcosφInclude power factor120V×5A×0.8=480W
3-Phase ACP = √3VIcosφIndustrial systems400V×20A×0.9×√3=12.5kW

Our calculator handles all these cases - just select the appropriate power type.

What is apparent, real, and reactive power?

In AC circuits, power has three components due to phase differences:

AC Power Triangle:
  1. Apparent Power (S): S = V × I (VA) - total power supplied
  2. Real Power (P): P = V × I × cosφ (W) - useful work done
  3. Reactive Power (Q): Q = V × I × sinφ (VAR) - energy stored/released
  4. Relationship: S² = P² + Q², cosφ = P/S
  5. Power Factor: cosφ = P/S (0 to 1, 1 is ideal)

Example: 120V, 10A, PF=0.8 → S=1200VA, P=960W, Q=720VAR. Only real power does useful work.

Mechanical & Thermal Power
How do I convert between mechanical and electrical power?

Conversion requires accounting for efficiency losses in motors and generators:

ConversionFormulaTypical EfficiencyExampleApplication
Mech → Elec (Generator)Pelec = η × Pmech85-95%100 HP → 71.3 kW elecPower plants
Elec → Mech (Motor)Pmech = η × Pelec75-95%10 kW → 9.5 kW mechIndustrial motors
Thermal → ElecPelec = η × Pthermal30-60%100 MW thermal → 40 MW elecSteam turbines
Solar → ElecPelec = η × Psolar15-22%1 kW/m² → 200 W/m²Solar panels

Always multiply by efficiency (η) to account for energy losses as heat, friction, etc.

How to calculate power for rotating machinery?

For rotational systems, power relates torque and angular speed:

Rotational Power Formulas:
  1. Basic formula: P = τ × ω (τ = torque in N·m, ω = angular speed in rad/s)
  2. With RPM: P (kW) = [τ (N·m) × RPM] / 9549
  3. With HP: P (HP) = [τ (lb·ft) × RPM] / 5252
  4. Example: 10 N·m at 3000 RPM → P = (10 × 3000)/9549 = 3.14 kW
  5. Conversion: 1 rad/s = 9.549 RPM, 1 RPM = 0.1047 rad/s

Use our mechanical power calculator with torque and angular speed inputs.

Practical Applications & Sizing
How to size a circuit breaker based on power?

Circuit breaker sizing requires calculating current from power and voltage:

Breaker Sizing Steps:
  1. Calculate current: I = P / V (for DC/resistive AC)
  2. For AC with PF: I = P / (V × cosφ)
  3. Add safety margin: Typically 125% of calculated current
  4. Choose standard breaker: 15A, 20A, 30A, 40A, 50A, etc.
  5. Check wire size: Match wire gauge to breaker rating

Example: 2400W appliance at 120V → I = 2400/120 = 20A → Use 25A breaker (20A × 1.25).

How much solar power do I need for my house?

Solar system sizing involves calculating daily energy needs and peak power:

Solar System Calculation:
  1. Daily energy: E = 30 kWh/day (typical house)
  2. Peak sun hours: 4-6 hours/day (depends on location)
  3. System size: P = E / (sun hours × system efficiency)
  4. Example: 30 kWh/day ÷ (5h × 0.8) = 7.5 kW system
  5. Number of panels: 7.5 kW ÷ 0.3 kW/panel = 25 panels
  6. Battery storage: For 2 days autonomy: 30 kWh/day × 2 = 60 kWh

Use our calculator to determine your specific power requirements first.

Scroll to Top