Typical new carbureted engine well tuned:
1 x HP per each 25 cc
Between 9 and 11 hp, depending on model.
305 heads work on a 350 engine
CC is NOT correlated to Horsepower. Cc is merely the capacity of that engine, NO relationship to horsepower.
13.93 horsepower for 209 cc engine
CC is NOT correlated to Horsepower. Cc is merely the capacity of that engine, NO relationship to horsepower.
There is no direct relationship between a cc and horsepower. 10
Horsepower only roughly translates into a cc range. Generally a 2 1/2 to 3 HP range is possible.
CC is NOT correlated to Horsepower. Cc is merely the capacity of that engine, NO relationship to horsepower.
Cubic Centermeter (cc) is a measurment of capacity and is directly not convertable to horsepower.
CC is not related to horsepower. CC is the capacity of the cylinders of that engine. -You can have a 212 cc industrial engine of abour 20 Hp, or a 212 cc trail bike engine of 60 hp. Many other factors govern horsepower.
There are 15-17 cc per horsepower, your engine has about 200 horsepower.
I've researched the same thing, last year actually when buying a 305 cc snow blower with a Briggs engine... I've heard it's comparable to 10 horse but there's no scientific way to convert CC's to horsepower. I can tell you that living in a snow belt in Ontario, the 305 CC's holds up just fine.