1 liter (l) = 1000 cubic centimeters (cc)
therefore 2 liters = 2000 cubic centimeters
2000cc (1000cc per liter).
1 litre = 1000 cc so 2 litres = 2*1000 = 2000 cc.
Normally the larger the engine the more power it will produce. But today with turbo chargers and other tuning options it is possible for a 2000 cc engine to be more powerul than a 2533 cc engine. I have seen 2 liter engines putting out 300 h.p. and 2.5 liter engines putting out only 130 h.p.
500 cc = 500 ml = 1/2 liter
That is 2,000 cc.
Beta 2.0 = 1975cc (Elantra)ThetaII 2.0 = 1998cc (Sonata Turbo. Genesis Coupe)
0.500 liters one half a liter (accurate to three significant figures)
1 liter = 1000 cc 2 liters = 2000 cc
A .2 of a liter, and a 7.3 Liter Diesel Exists
Cubic capacity and horsepower have no direct correlation.
If you convert 500 cc to liters, the result is 0.5 liters. It would take 1000 cubic centimeters to equal a liter.
you can convert cubic inches to cc's but not horse power. an engine with say 65 cc's can have different amounts of horse power depending on carberation, pistons, valves etc. etc. etc. but my 65 cc engine does have 1.89 hp if that helps.
2 liter 2010 Hyundai a none interference or interference engine