By the number of horsepower its got.
A car gets its power from the engine, or the motor.
the bottom part of the car is it A: Torque is grunt, the pulling power of the engine, measured in Horse power.
Motor,Power plant,
A watt is simply the SI unit for power, and the horsepower is the Imperial unit for power. Power is simply the rate of doing work, so there is no such thing as 'electrical' or any other, 'sort' of power. In Europe, a car's engine output power ('brake power') is expressed in kilowatts as the horsepower is considered obsolete.
A kilowatt is the metric unit for power. A horsepower is the Imperial unit for the same thing. So there's absolutely no reason why a kilowatt shouldn't be used to measure the output power of a car engine in the same way that a horsepower was. In fact, outside the US, most countries rate their car engines in kilowatts not in horsepower.
if it had no engine
It burns up and goes to the engine to power it so your car can move
The 3.0L on your car engine gives you an idea that the engine of your car can suck up a total of 3.0L mixture of air and fuel then burns it out as a power of your engine to move your car.
there is no such thing. it is powered by the engine.
The engine or the Cylinder.
The gas and the motor or engine.
the engine produces the horse power