pound per horsepower
1foot pound per second — (ft·lbf/s or ft·lb/s) a traditional unit of power equal to about 1.355 818 watt or 0.001 818 horsepower …
2Horsepower — hp redirects here. For other uses, see HP (disambiguation). Horsepower (HP) is the name of several units of measurement of power. The most common definitions equal between 735.5 and 750 watts.[1] Horsepower was originally defined to compare the… …
3horsepower — /hawrs pow euhr/, n. 1. a foot pound second unit of power, equivalent to 550 foot pounds per second, or 745.7 watts. 2. Informal. the capacity to achieve or produce; strength or talent: The university s history faculty is noted for its… …
4horsepower — horse•pow•er [[t]ˈhɔrsˌpaʊ ər[/t]] n. 1) mec a foot pound second unit of power, equivalent to 550 foot pounds per second, or 745.7 watts 2) cvb inf Informal. the capacity to achieve or produce; strength or talent • Etymology: 1800–10 …
5Foot-pound force — The foot pound force, or simply foot pound (symbol: ft·lbf or ft·lb) is a unit of work or energy (a scalar) and also a unit of torque (a vector). There is actually no such thing as foot pounds . The correct term is pound feet .Foot pounds is… …
6Bristol Pegasus — For the vectored thrust engine, see Rolls Royce Pegasus The Bristol Pegasus was a British nine cylinder single row air cooled radial engine used in the 1930s and 1940s. Confusingly, Bristol chose to reuse the name many years later for the engine… …
7Chevrolet Corvette CERV — is a series of experimental Chevrolet Corvette cars, with mid engine configuration.CERV IZora Arkus Duntov started development of CERV I (Chevrolet Experimental Racing Vehicle) in 1959, which was later unveiled in public at Riverside… …
8Chevrolet Engineering Research Vehicle (CERV) — The Chevrolet Engineering Research Vehicle (CERV) is a series of Chevrolet experimental cars. Chevrolet Staff engineer, designer, and race car driver Zora Arkus Duntov started development of the CERV I in 1959, and began work on the CERV II in… …
9Conversion of units — is the conversion between different units of measurement for the same quantity, typically through multiplicative conversion factors. Contents 1 Techniques 1.1 Process 1.2 Multiplication factors …
10Torque — For other uses, see Torque (disambiguation). Classical mechanics Newton s Second Law …