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Started By
Message
MEs, power conversion question; re, steam boiler.
Posted on 3/29/14 at 9:55 am
Posted on 3/29/14 at 9:55 am
So I'm looking at the specs for this steam boiler and it is rated at 1,852,000 btu/hour (see page 8 model 24-12). The spec sheet shows that 1,852,000 btu/hour = 55.3 Hp.
However, when I go to this online unit conversation website; LINK and convert 1,852,000 btu/hour to Hp the conversion says;
1,852,000 btu/hour = 728 Hp
However, when I go to this online unit conversation website; LINK and convert 1,852,000 btu/hour to Hp the conversion says;
1,852,000 btu/hour = 728 Hp
Posted on 3/29/14 at 9:57 am to GumboPot
One HP is around 2,500 btu, straight math homie.
ETA: know nothing of this boiler, but it is listed as gross output. HP must be rated off of some other calc.
ETA: know nothing of this boiler, but it is listed as gross output. HP must be rated off of some other calc.
This post was edited on 3/29/14 at 10:02 am
Posted on 3/29/14 at 9:59 am to fightin tigers
Agree, but then why does the spec sheet for the boiler say 1,852,000 btu/hour = 55.3 Hp.
Posted on 3/29/14 at 10:01 am to GumboPot
Hoe many BMW X5s does that equal?
Posted on 3/29/14 at 10:04 am to GumboPot
According to the Internet (which is never wrong) 55.3 hp = 1,851,000 British thermal units per hour
Posted on 3/29/14 at 10:04 am to GumboPot
The rating the manufacturer gives is in boiler horsepower, which is the power required to boil 34.5 pounds of water in 1 hour at atmospheric pressure and is about 10000 Watts and a Watt is about 3 BTU/hr, so 1 boiler hp is roughly 30000 BTU/hr, giving about 60 boiler hp for a boiler with a duty of about 1,800,000 BTU/hr (I said duty).
The conversion site is using the standard definition of a hp, which is about 750 Watts, or about 2400 BTU/hr. 1,800,000 BTU/hr divided by 2400 BTU/hr is about 750 hp.
And there's your answer.
The conversion site is using the standard definition of a hp, which is about 750 Watts, or about 2400 BTU/hr. 1,800,000 BTU/hr divided by 2400 BTU/hr is about 750 hp.
And there's your answer.
This post was edited on 3/29/14 at 10:06 am
Posted on 3/29/14 at 10:05 am to Hickok
quote:
According to the Internet (which is never wrong) 55.3 hp = 1,851,000 British thermal units per hour
Link please?
Posted on 3/29/14 at 10:07 am to TigerstuckinMS
quote:
rating the manufacturer gives is in boiler horsepower,
Yep, this is what I have found too. Didnt know there was a difference.
Posted on 3/29/14 at 10:08 am to TigerstuckinMS
quote:
The rating the manufacturer gives is in boiler horsepower, which is the power required to boil 34.5 pounds of water in 1 hour at atmospheric pressure and is about 10000 Watts and a Watt is about 3 BTU/hr, so 1 boiler hp is roughly 30000 BTU/hr, giving about 60 boiler hp for a boiler with a duty of about 1,800,000 BTU/hr (I said duty).
The conversion site is using the standard definition of a hp, which is about 750 Watts, or about 2400 BTU/hr. 1,800,000 BTU/hr divided by 2400 BTU/hr is about 750 hp.
Thanks dude.
Posted on 3/29/14 at 10:10 am to GumboPot
Boiler HP and thermal HP are different
Posted on 3/29/14 at 10:14 am to GumboPot
quote:
Thanks dude.
No problem. I bill out at $150/hr.
Who should I invoice?
Posted on 3/29/14 at 12:15 pm to TigerstuckinMS
Simply:
One boiler horsepower is defined as 33,475 BTU/hr.
So 1,852,000 BTU/hr / 33,475 BTU/hr = 55.3 Boiler HP.
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