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735 kW (986 hp; 1,000 PS) Plug-in hybrid: Up to 2000 units per year planned. [43] [44] Denza Z9/Z9 GT BEV 2024 710 kW (952 hp; 965 PS) Electric: LaFerrari: 2013 708 kW (949 hp; 963 PS) Hybrid electric: 710+ units produced. [45] Koenigsegg Agera: 2010 706 kW (947 hp; 960 PS) Internal combustion: 7 units produced McLaren P1: 2013 674 kW (903 hp ...
The Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt produced a maximum of 3.5 hp (2.6 kW) 0.89 seconds into his 9.58 second 100-metre (109.4 yd) sprint world record in 2009. [14] [failed verification] In 2023 a group of engineers modified a dynamometer to be able to measure how much power a horse can produce. This horse was measured to 5.7 hp (4.3 kW). [15]
1.6-litre, 35 kW (48 PS; 47 hp) — 1967–1970 Volkswagen Type 2 ID code- CA, CB 1.7-litre, 49 kW (67 PS; 66 hp) — 1971–1973 Volkswagen Type 2 ID code- W, EA 1.7-litre, 59 kW (80 PS; 79 hp) — 1969–1974 Volkswagen Type 4 412 ID code- AP, AW 1.8-litre, 50 kW (68 PS; 67 hp) — 1973–1975 Volkswagen Type 2 ID code- ED
A typical turbocharged V8 diesel engine might have an engine power of 250 kW (340 hp) and a mass of 380 kg (840 lb), [1] giving it a power-to-weight ratio of 0.65 kW/kg (0.40 hp/lb). Examples of high power-to-weight ratios can often be found in turbines.
Engine power is the power that an engine can put out. It can be expressed in power units, most commonly kilowatt, pferdestärke (metric horsepower), or horsepower.In terms of internal combustion engines, the engine power usually describes the rated power, which is a power output that the engine can maintain over a long period of time according to a certain testing method, for example ISO 1585.
55 kW (75 PS; 74 bhp) — Volkswagen Industrial Motor - 455 (CBJ: 05/07->) 63 kW (86 PS; 84 bhp) at 3,000 rpm; 250 N⋅m (184 lbf⋅ft) at 1,750 rpm — Volkswagen Industrial Motor - 463 74 kW (101 PS; 99 bhp) at 3,000 rpm; 285 N⋅m (210 lbf⋅ft) at 1,750 rpm — Volkswagen Industrial Motor - 474 (CBK: 01/07->) DIN-rated power & torque ...
At first the RAC rating was usually representative of the car's actual (brake) horsepower, but as engine design and technology progressed in the 1920s and 1930s these two figures began to diverge, with engines making much more power than their RAC ratings suggested: by 1924 the 747 cc (45.6 cu in) engine of the Austin Seven (named for its 7 hp ...
The 430 cu in (7.0 L; 7,044 cc) engine was produced from 1958 through 1965, and used in Ford, Mercury, and Lincoln products. It was the standard engine on all 1958 to 1960 Lincolns and Continentals. Power was 375 hp (280 kW) in 1958, 350 hp (261 kW) in 1959, 315 hp (235 kW) in 1960, 325 hp (242 kW) in 1961 and 340 hp (254 kW) in 1964.