You mean "horse power" I presume.
Go here:
http://auto.howstuffworks.com/question622.htm
One cannot "Calculate the accelaration of a car by its engine power in cc" and hence derive the "force applied by it" because, depending on the configuration of the engine varying amounts of horsepower (ie engine power) can be obtained from the same size engine. One would have to have a known amount of "engine power" to apply the "F=ME" formula and from there calculate the acceleration possibilities.
On a 1985 Lincoln Town Car : Follow the top radiator hose from the radiator to the engine . Where the hose connects to the engine the engine cooling thermostat is inside the housing
how calculate average from engine displacement in cc
A car gets its power from the engine, or the motor.
Of course you do not have to remove the engine. Take the car to a professional for this repair. Your question indicates that you do not have the knowledge or skill to perform this repair.
follow the top radiator hose to the engine the hose is attached to it with a hose clamp, there should be two three bolts holding it to the engine
It connects to a heater hose behind the engine.
With a Dynamometer.
Broken vacuam hose, check PVC hose and power brake hose. One possiblity is:you need to check the coolant fluid level. DO NOT OPEN the radiator when it is hot. Hot Coolant WILL scald! Let the engine cool down and check the coolant reservoir. Re-fill the reservoir slowly away from your face. Cold coolant going into a hot engine will boilback and spurt out of the tank. If refilling the coolant does not remedy the problem, it may be more serious and need a mechanic.
The thermostat is located at the engine end of the lower radiator hose (passenger side). If the car has power-steering the power steering pump and mounting bracket have to be removed to get to the thermostat housing. The thermostat is at the end of the bottom hose, in the water pump housing ..not the top.
the car will start overheat because of loosing coolant or clogged heater core, also you will have no heat inside the car,and if the car overheats the engine will be weak and loos lots of power and overheating will cause other parts that can't take too much heat, also if the car heated up really bad might blow the heads/intake gasket, if your heater core goes bad and have no money to fix the car for now, you can by pass it, behind the engine 2 small hoses going from the engine to the heater core all you have to do take both of them off and use one hose as going/return hose, like the latter U, one hose coming from the engine and going back to the engine to the other end of the hose that's all very easy to do takes less then 5 minutes
the bottom part of the car is it A: Torque is grunt, the pulling power of the engine, measured in Horse power.