Lifted this extract from Wikipedia.
Could this be what we are looking for?
Quote....."The various units used to indicate this definition (PS, cv, hk, pk, ks and ch) all translate to horse power in English, so it is common to see these values referred to as horsepower or hp in the press releases or media coverage of the German, French, Italian, and Japanese automobile companies. British manufacturers often intermix metric horsepower and mechanical horsepower depending on the origin of the engine in question. Sometimes the metric horsepower rating of an engine is conservative enough so that the same figure can be used for both 80/1269/EEC with metric hp and SAE J1349 with imperial hp."
lost 2hp ..
Moderators: slparry, Gromit, Paul
According to my copy of Bosch automotive handbook (2nd edition):
1 PS (Pferdestärke) = 1 ch (cheval vapeur) = 735.499 W
This is according to DIN 66 036 standard.
BHP and American HP = 745.70 W
Probably according to the SAE standard mentioned above, by Corvus.
1 PS (Pferdestärke) = 1 ch (cheval vapeur) = 735.499 W
This is according to DIN 66 036 standard.
BHP and American HP = 745.70 W
Probably according to the SAE standard mentioned above, by Corvus.
R1100S '04
K100RS '90
GSX1100 (1327cc) '81
Lada Niva '12
CCDV '72
K100RS '90
GSX1100 (1327cc) '81
Lada Niva '12
CCDV '72
Is the Cheval Vapeur the same as a Horse FartTapio wrote:According to my copy of Bosch automotive handbook (2nd edition):
1 PS (Pferdestärke) = 1 ch (cheval vapeur) = 735.499 W
This is according to DIN 66 036 standard.
BHP and American HP = 745.70 W
Probably according to the SAE standard mentioned above, by Corvus.

--
Steve Parry
Current fleet: '14 F800GS, '87 R80RS, '03 R1100S BoxerCup, '15 R1200RT LE Dynamic, '90 K1, '05 K1200S
Steve Parry
Current fleet: '14 F800GS, '87 R80RS, '03 R1100S BoxerCup, '15 R1200RT LE Dynamic, '90 K1, '05 K1200S
So how many horse farts does your bike produce?slparry wrote:Is the Cheval Vapeur the same as a Horse FartTapio wrote:According to my copy of Bosch automotive handbook (2nd edition):
1 PS (Pferdestärke) = 1 ch (cheval vapeur) = 735.499 W
This is according to DIN 66 036 standard.
BHP and American HP = 745.70 W
Probably according to the SAE standard mentioned above, by Corvus.
Are you conderned about emissions?

Big Scottish Al
____________
1982 BMW R65LS
1̶9̶9̶9̶ ̶B̶M̶W̶ ̶R̶1̶1̶0̶0̶S̶
2004 BMW R1150R Rockster 80 Jahre
____________
1982 BMW R65LS
1̶9̶9̶9̶ ̶B̶M̶W̶ ̶R̶1̶1̶0̶0̶S̶
2004 BMW R1150R Rockster 80 Jahre
to quote Bike Magazine (from their article on leaded fuels) " ... short of putting lead in Farleys Rusks, putting lead in petrol is the perfect way of ensuring your children are stupid..." ....McBoxer wrote:So how many horse farts does your bike produce?slparry wrote:Is the Cheval Vapeur the same as a Horse FartTapio wrote:According to my copy of Bosch automotive handbook (2nd edition):
1 PS (Pferdestärke) = 1 ch (cheval vapeur) = 735.499 W
This is according to DIN 66 036 standard.
BHP and American HP = 745.70 W
Probably according to the SAE standard mentioned above, by Corvus.
Are you conderned about emissions?
Emissions are behind me ......
Last edited by slparry on Thu Nov 14, 2013 2:15 pm, edited 1 time in total.
--
Steve Parry
Current fleet: '14 F800GS, '87 R80RS, '03 R1100S BoxerCup, '15 R1200RT LE Dynamic, '90 K1, '05 K1200S
Steve Parry
Current fleet: '14 F800GS, '87 R80RS, '03 R1100S BoxerCup, '15 R1200RT LE Dynamic, '90 K1, '05 K1200S
.....and .735/.746 = .985. (Edited!)Tapio wrote:According to my copy of Bosch automotive handbook (2nd edition):
1 PS (Pferdestärke) = 1 ch (cheval vapeur) = 735.499 W
This is according to DIN 66 036 standard.
BHP and American HP = 745.70 W
Probably according to the SAE standard mentioned above, by Corvus.
So that's 1.5% difference. There's probably more allowance than that in the standards pertaining to published horsepower figures. Hence the switching between the two with gay abandon?
So German and French horses do the same amount of work, just slightly less than American and British horses.Tapio wrote:According to my copy of Bosch automotive handbook (2nd edition):
1 PS (Pferdestärke) = 1 ch (cheval vapeur) = 735.499 W
This is according to DIN 66 036 standard.
BHP and American HP = 745.70 W
Probably according to the SAE standard mentioned above, by Corvus.
The French horse power is a rare unit, presumably because the French ate them all, or sold them to Findus.
********Jim********
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2006 'Colgate' R1200s
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2006 'Colgate' R1200s
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