There is no set amount of horse powers per cc, it depends entirely on how efficient the engine design is, the type of fuel and other factors, this is easily demonstrated by a 4 stroke lawnmower engine, of 160cc (I used a Honda gx160 for this example), which produces 5.5 hp and a 2 stroke 125cc (FR125 Rotax Max in this example) engine which produces 22hp.
As I said, its all in the design.
Sorry I couldn't answer your question.
Hope this helps.
Matt
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
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.
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.
To convert cubic centimeters (cc) to horsepower, you typically use a rough estimate that 1 cc is approximately equal to 0.00134 horsepower. Therefore, 338 cc would be roughly equivalent to about 0.45 horsepower. However, this is a general approximation and actual horsepower can vary based on engine design and efficiency.
155 cc
Roughly 25 cc gives 1 HP.
9 hp
There is no direct conversion between CC (cubic centimeters) and horsepower as horsepower is a measure of power output, while CC is a measure of engine displacement. The horsepower a 190 CC engine can produce varies based on factors such as design, efficiency, and tuning, among others.
You need to know the cubic inch not hp to convert to cc.