Fan Power Calculator

Fan Power Calculator – Estimate HP, kW & Energy Costs

Views in the last 30 days: 13

Estimated read time: 3 minute(s)

Fan Power Calculator (HP, kW, Energy, Cost)

Fan Power Calculator: What It Is, How It Works & Sample Project

Quickly estimate air power (Q×ΔP), brake horsepower, motor input (kW), and monthly energy cost with standards-inspired presets.

What this calculator is used for

It estimates the power and energy requirements of ventilation, exhaust, and process fans. You’ll get:

Air Power
Q × ΔP
Converts to kW
Brake HP
AMCA form
Density-corrected
Motor Input
kW
η fan × drive × motor × VFD
Energy & Cost
kWh / month
Hours × days × load factor

Presets are inspired by AMCA, ASHRAE 90.1, and SMACNA good practices. Always verify values for your project.

Inputs you provide

Per Fan (segment)

  • Flow (m³/s or CFM)
  • Total pressure ΔP (Pa or in.wg)
  • Leakage % (adds to flow) & Fouling % (adds to ΔP)
  • Efficiencies: fan η, drive η, motor η, VFD η
  • Air temperature & Altitude or manual density
  • Duty % (if a fan runs fewer hours)

Global (energy & cost)

  • Country (IN/US/UK) → currency & default tariff
  • Tariff (per kWh) & load factor (%)
  • Hours/day and days/month
  • Global safety (%) on motor sizing
  • Capex rate per kW or HP + markup (%)

How to use it (quick steps)

  1. Click + Add Fan and pick a Preset (e.g., AHU Supply).
  2. Enter/confirm Flow, ΔP, and efficiencies.
  3. Set leakage, fouling, and global safety allowances.
  4. Fill in tariff, hours, days, and load factor.
  5. Click Calculate to see kW, HP, kWh/month, and cost.
  6. Use Reverse Mode for “motor limit → max flow” or “target duty → motor”.
  7. Generate the HTML Report for KPIs, breakdown table, and assumptions.
Methodology & unit math (click to expand)

Air power: P_air = Q · ΔP (Q in m³/s, ΔP in Pa → W). With allowances: Q_eff = Q · (1+leak%), ΔP_eff = ΔP · (1+fouling%).

Motor input: P_in = P_air ÷ (η_fan · η_drive · η_motor · η_vfd), then apply global safety: P_in,final = P_in · (1 + safety%).

Brake HP (AMCA form): BHP = (CFM · ΔP_in.wg · ρ/0.075) ÷ (6356 · η_fan).

Energy per month: E = P_in,final · LoadFactor · hours/day · days/month · duty%.

Capex estimate: Capex = Rate × (kW or HP) × (1+markup%).

Sample project: AHU Supply fan (complete calculation)

Assume the AHU Supply preset with SI units and India tariffs. Verify against your project criteria.

Given / Inputs

  • Flow Q = 2.50 m³/s, Leakage = 3%Qeff = 2.575 m³/s
  • ΔP = 650 Pa, Fouling = 5%ΔPeff = 682.5 Pa
  • Efficiencies: ηfan=0.68, ηdrive=0.95, ηmotor=0.93, ηvfd=0.98
  • Global safety = 10%
  • Tariff = ₹7/kWh, Hours/day=10, Days/month=30, Load factor=80%
  • Air 24 °C, sea level (auto density)

Step-by-step

  1. Air power: Pair = 2.575 × 682.5 = 1757.44 W = 1.757 kW
  2. Shaft power: 1.757 ÷ 0.68 = 2.584 kW
  3. Motor input (core): 2.584 ÷ (0.95×0.93×0.98 = 0.86583) = 2.985 kW
  4. Motor input (with safety): 2.985 × 1.10 = 3.283 kW
  5. Brake HP (AMCA): Qeff=5456 CFM, ΔPeff=2.743 in.wg → BHP ≈ 3.46 HP
  6. Energy/month: 3.283 × 0.8 × 10 × 30 = 788 kWh
  7. Cost/month: 788 × ₹7 ≈ ₹5,516
KPIValue
Total air power1.757 kW
Brake horsepower3.46 HP
Motor input (final)3.283 kW
Energy / month~788 kWh
Cost / month~₹5,516
Indicative Capex*At ₹8,000 per kW + 10% markup → ~₹28,892

*Capex uses the global rate/markup in the calculator and scales with total input kW or HP.

Tips to improve accuracy

  • Use actual system ΔP from your duct design (see Duct Design Calculator).
  • Confirm air density from site altitude & temperature, or enter manual density.
  • Pick realistic efficiency chain from manufacturer data (fan + drive + motor + VFD).
  • Set load factor from BMS trends to avoid overestimating energy.

Related reading

Make readers stay longer

  • Add a short quiz (e.g., “Which parameter increases BHP the most?”) with instant feedback.
  • Embed a before/after slider showing energy impact of better efficiencies.
  • Offer a downloadable report from the calculator (already supported) and a CSV export.
  • Place a preset gallery (“AHU, Cleanroom, Parking, Kitchen Hood…”) above the fold.
Pro tip: Keep the accent color consistent with your featured image (#2563eb).

Leave a Comment