Stall speed is the rpm point at which the little stator quits doing it fluid redirect act. Any time you're accelerating or needing power, the stator lags behind, redirecting the fluid against the turbine a second time (torque multiplication). As the need for power drops off (top of the hill, cruise, etc), it catches up with the turbine and effectively 'stalls' in relation to turbine speed. At this point torque multiplication stops. Stall speed is basically the rpm point at which the magic stops inside the torque converter. You're back to 1:1 torque multiplication. 10 pounds of sugar out of a 10 pound bag.
Stall speed is all about torque multiplication. It has nothing to do with when a vehicle starts moving forward. This relies on the fin configuration inside the turbine and pump. Example, once warmed up, my truck will move forward at 5mph with the engine idling at 650rpm. The stall speed is actually around twice that rpm.
Here's a quick 'n dirty test to determine stall speed for your specific power train:
1. Bring the engine and tranny up to operating temps.
2. Lock the brakes. Set the parking brake, place wheel chocks, chain it down, etc. Whatever you need to do
to make sure that sucker will not move.
3. Place the trans in Drive.
4. Hold the brakes down and floor the accelerator pedal.
5. The engine will accelerate to a certain rpm and hold there. That's your stall speed.
WARNING: DO NOT RUN THIS TEST FOR MORE THAN 15 SECONDS ! !
Because you're really stirring up the fluid in the torque converter, it generates a LOT of heat. 15 seconds gives you a chance to take an accurate reading and stop well before the fluid gets hot. If you want/need to retest, let the engine idle in park for several minutes before retesting.
Rule of thumb:
Higher than normal RPM: weak torque converter (or modified engine)
Lower than normal RPM: weak engine