Engine size does not necessarily relate to horespower. Generally speaking larger engines produce more horsepower than smaller ones, but there is no set amount of horsepower an engine of a certain size produces. For example, the 2010 Honda CBR600RR produces about 107 bhp, but the 2010 Honda CBF600N (which uses the same engine, just tuned differently) produces about 76 bhp.
Although I would say that since this is a large engine in bike terms, you were looking somewhere over 100 bhp, depending on tuning.
CC is NOT correlated to Horsepower. Cc is merely the capacity of that engine, NO relationship to horsepower.
Horsepower does not convert to cc: ci or cubic inches does. Horsepower is a measurement of work, cc and ci are measurements of volume
CC is NOT correlated to Horsepower. Cc is merely the capacity of that engine, NO relationship to horsepower.
CC is NOT correlated to Horsepower. Cc is merely the capacity of that engine, NO relationship to horsepower.
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'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.
There is no direct relationship between a cc and horsepower. 10
CC is NOT correlated to Horsepower. Cc is merely the capacity of that engine, NO relationship to horsepower.
HP does not directly relate to cc
Cubic Centermeter (cc) is a measurment of capacity and is directly not convertable to horsepower.
CC's and horsepower are not related. CC is the size of the combustion chamber in cubic centimeters, or in the American system,in cubic inches. There are 16.387 cc in a ci. -So a 300 CI engine is roughly 4920 cc , or 4.92 litres.