It is not material, it is the volume of all the combustion cylinders.
Liters are a measure of volume, and pounds are a measure of weight. You can't convert between the two without knowing the material being measured and its density.
Engine capacity is measured in cubic inches, cubic centimeters or liters; a common Ford V8 (eight cylinder) engine is a 302. Three hundred cubic inches or 5 liters. Capacity is measured by the amount (volume) of air in the cylinder it displaces. Here is the link, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engine_displacement
liters
The size of the engine is 350 cubic inches of displacement. Engines used to be measured in cubic inches of displacement, now they are measured in liters. A 350 is now usually referred to as the 5.7 liter.
Pounds are a unit of mass, and liters of volume. You can't convert one to the other without knowing the density of the material being measured.
No, they are not.
No they are not.
Five liter engine refers to the actual size of the engine, measured in liters rather than cubic inches. It also relates to how large the cylinders are on the inside of the engine
no in pounds or kilos liters are for liquid
it can be but its more often measured in liters
Yes, sand can be measured by litres.
2.2 liters is the maximum volume (displacement) of the cylinders in an internal combustion engine. 2.2 liters would most likely be the volume of a 4 cylinder engine. Bigger engines have larger displacements. Displacement can also be measured in cubic inches (ci). About 61.4 ci is equal to 1 liter. Chevy's 350ci v8 can also be measured as 5.7Liters.