By displacement in cubic inches or cubic centimeters.
Bore x stroke
CC wrt engines is a measure of cylinder volume, in cubic centimeters.
A feeler gauge is typically used to measure dynamic valve clearance in internal combustion engines. The gauge is inserted between the valve stem and the rocker arm to determine the correct clearance while the engine is running.
cc means "cubic centimeter." It is a way to measure the size of an engine, usually motorcycle and other smaller engines. ci means "cubic inch" and is usually used for larger engines like car engines.
Horse power is a measure of the power output of engines using the pulling capacity of a draft horse as its base unit. It was originally used to compare the power of steam engines compared to horses and was later extended to included petrol and diesel engines.
It stands for Cubic Centimeters. It is the measure of the engines displacement or the size of the engine as most people refer to it.
C9 gas is a octane rating for gasoline, indicating a higher resistance to knocking in engines. It is a quality measure of gasoline's performance in engines, with C9 being a mid-level octane rating.
generally you could remove a head and measure the bore with a micrometer. then read specs on the vehicle and what it's original engines bore was. make sure an engine was not swapped into the original engines place.
CC- cubic centimeters, used mainly to measure oil capacity and engine size. Like CI (cubic inches) is used to measure the size of bigger engines.
No, you can measure anything with a cyclic behavior with hz. eg light waves, radio waves, oceanic waves, car engines, meeting schedules, orbital frequencies.
Depends on the context...It could be a measure or Torque or tightness of a nut or bolt. nm - Newton-Meter as opposed the English measure ft-lbs or foot pounds.
The following are some of the items that are appropriate: The number of engines The number of cars the engines are pulling The total tonnage being pulled The speed at which the train is moving The total length of the train Fuel consumption per mile of travel