Converting rated Watts to HP 17520watts = 23.5hp
Converting surge Watts to HP 26250watts = 35.2hp
Selecting midpoint 23.5hp + 5.85hp = 29.5hp
As such, it’s probably 30hp give or take.
A Northern Tool data sheet specs the BP17500E out at 30hp.
Search for it. This post doesn’t permit links.
approx 30 hp.
21hp
40
Cc's do not relate to horsepower. Cubic centimetres (cc) is the measure of size of the engine. Horsepower is related to the engines type and tuning.
A 208cc engine would be a 8.32 Horsepower engine. The math goes like this... 1 x HP per each 25 cc for conventional engines. It is slightly lower for fuel injected engines, about 22 cc.
Nobody changed horsepower to cc. Horsepower is a measure of the power of things, including car engines, cc is a measure of the internal size of the engine and is only remotely related to power. A better tuned or better designed engine of the same cc will be more powerful.
An engines cubic capacity cannot be converted, mathematically, to horsepower without a host of other information..
Displacement does not correspond directly to horsepower rating, and the horsepower ratings of various 155cc engines (not motors) can vary greatly.
CC's of an engine refer to displacement. That has nothing to do with horsepower. Compressions ratios and other factors can cause large variations in horsepower for similar sized engines.
cc's is engine size in all terrian vehicles and horse powers used in car engines ect.
OLD ANSWER: cc is displacement. Horsepower is the capability to do work. A 50 cc engine may have one horse power, but that does not mean that all 50cc engines have one horsepower. MY IMPROVEMENTS: CC is a Unit of VOLUME and when speaking of ENGINES, has to do With the SIZE of the engine. a 100cc Engine is Bigger (Physically) than a 50cc engine, a 150cc Engine is Bigger than a 100cc Engine, etc.... Typically The larger (The More CC's) The More Horsepower, but this is a bit deceptive, as a 100cc engine from Company A could Output 50 HP (Horsepower); whereas a 150cc engine from Company B could Output 50 HP as well. You can only ASSUME that More CC's (larger, Means More Horsepower when comparing engines from the same Company that are in the same Model Line (i.e. Company A's Model-A Engines). All in all, More CC's Simply means a BIGGER Engine in the Physical Sense. And Horsepower is the OUPUT Energy from an Engine.
You can not correlate cc to horsepower, it just doesn't work. Many small high speed engines may have incredible hp / size ratio, but conventional auto engines are different.
It depends on the engine. Horsepower is a measurement of the engines effect. CC the size... It is possible for engines with the same size to have different effects.
CC is NOT correlated to Horsepower. Cc is merely the capacity of that engine, NO relationship to horsepower.
You don't! Engines of the same size (cc) can have very different power outputs. If you want to know what yours is, you will need to take it somewhere that has a Dynomometer.