The Original Engine was 27 Ltrs (1,647.6411 Cubic Inches) But I recall the last versions may have been 35 Ltrs.
A 2.4 liter engine has a displacement of 146.457 cubic inches or 2400cc
The cubic capacity is a measure of engine size. Cubic capacity is the total volume of the engine cylinders taken by piston movement (piston stroke). Apart from performance, it is one of the parameters of a combustion engine. it is the size of your engine block. for ex. a 305 has three hundred and five cubic all together.
The 5.4 liter is 330 cubic inches
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
CC- cubic centimeters, used mainly to measure oil capacity and engine size. Like CI (cubic inches) is used to measure the size of bigger engines.
centimetre cube CC (cubic centimeter) is refered to the cylinder capacity of the engine. For example, if you say 500cc engine, then the sum total capacity of the cylinders will be 500 cubic centimeter
Engine cubic capacity, often referred to as engine displacement, is determined by three primary factors: the bore (the diameter of the cylinder), the stroke (the distance the piston travels within the cylinder), and the number of cylinders in the engine. The cubic capacity is calculated using the formula: ( \text{Cubic Capacity} = \pi \times \left(\frac{\text{Bore}}{2}\right)^2 \times \text{Stroke} \times \text{Number of Cylinders} ). Together, these components influence the engine's ability to generate power and torque.
It is the volume that the piston swipes in one stroke inside the engine cylinder.
If you mean engine capacity it is 1898cc.
Blocks are in many sizes according to the cubic capacity of engine
There are roughly ( 61 cubic inches per litre )
The cylinder capacity of a car engine - is usually given in cubic centimetres (abbreviated to cc)