The 383 CID 6.3 L V8 (Chrysler B Engine) was the standard power plant for the Road Runner and had a base-horsepower (bhp) rating of 335 bhp and 425 lb-ft of torque, from the factory.
As far as horsepower and foot-pound ratings, it would depend a number of factors including, but not limited to: intake; exhaust; type of carb (2bbl/4bbl); torque-converter; etc...
It would help if you were more specific with what year of Road Runner is in question.
As far as the twelve years the car was in production, horsepower ratings ranged between 195 bhp (1978+) and 425 bhp (1970 426 Hemi).
In 1989 the 5.8L (351W) made 210-horsepower and 315 pound foot of torque.
The torque on a Duramax LB7 is 520 pound-foot. The LBZ is 650 and the LMM is 660. The horsepower on a Duramax is 300.
Horsepower @ rpm 185 @ 4,000 220 @ 5,200 Torque @ rpm, pound-foot 270 @ 2,400 260 @ 3,600
Originally horsepower was rated by the amount of energy required for a horse to lift a 1 pound weight 1 foot in the air = 1 horsepower
The power rating for the 2006 5.9L I-6 Cummins diesel engine is 325 horsepower and 610 pound foot of torque.
The '08 to '10 6.4L Powerstroke Turbo Diesel V8s had 350 horsepower and 650 pound foot of torque. The all-new 2011 Ford built Powerstroke diesel has 390 horsepower and 735 pound foot of torque. This is a 6.7L single turbo engine.
-- foot-pound -- watt-second -- watt-hour -- kilowatt-hour -- horsepower-hour -- inch-pound SI unit: Joule
It depends on the size of the baler. A 50 horsepower tractor is sufficient for a 90 pound bale size machine, while a big round bale machine needs closer to 100 hp. The full-size 4 foot by 4 foot by 8 foot 2,000 pound bales work most efficiently on a 150 to 200 hp tractor.
Joule and foot-pound are units of energy. Power is measured in watts or horsepower, and it represents the rate at which energy is transferred or converted. Newton is a unit of force, not a rate.
"Foot-lbs" is a unit of energy, whereas "horsepower" is a unit of power,which is the same as the rate of using energy.1 horsepower = 550 foot-pounds per second
The basic units are foot, pound and second.The basic units are foot, pound and second.The basic units are foot, pound and second.The basic units are foot, pound and second.
There are 55,000 foot-pounds per second in 100 horsepower.