Depends on how it's tuned
5
4
First generation (1998-2005), 796 cc 3 cylinder gasoline 50 hp, 995 cc 4 cylinder gasoline 62 hp, Second generation (2005-2009), 796 cc 3 cylinder gasoline 51 hp, 995 cc 4 cylinder gasoline 65 hp, Third generation (2010-present), 995 cc 4 cylinder gasoline 67 hp, 1,206 cc 4 cylinder gasoline 80 hp, 1,199 cc 4 cylinder gasoline 79.4 hp, 1,249 cc 4 cylinder gasoline 84 hp, 1,199 cc 4 cylinder LPG 78.95 hp, 936 cc 4 cylinder diesel 61.6 hp,
Around 4/5 hp.
These things aren't related like that. CC means cubic centimeters. Its how much displacement the engine has. HP means horsepower. example: 2.3L 4 cylinder engines can make anywhere from 90 HP to 220 HP...
10.5
The motor size of most chainsaws are approximately 2 cc. There are, however, different size motors that range from 2 cc to 4 cc.
There is no direct conversion from cc to hp. It depends on the design of the engine. A turbocharged engine will create more hp than a normally aspirated engine of the same cc displacement. Type of engine also matters, diesel, 4 cycle, 2 cycle, wankel rotary. I had an old VW Beetle with 1200 cc creating 40 hp, then I had a motorcycle with only 250 cc that created 33 hp.
The 176cc engines are about 5 hp; 160cc =3-4 hp 176 (foreign) 4-5 hp 205cc= 5-7 hp 250cc= 8 hp 350cc=11-13 hp
4 units
Volume and HP do not have an absolute direct correlation. Between 4 and 5 HP would be a good guess.
The two are not related. CC(cubic centimeters) is a measure of piston displacement as is CI or (cubic inches). It is possible for various size motor diplacements to have the same horsepower. IE a 50cc motor as well as a 90cc motor theoreticall could have the same horsepower. (whatever that may be). Although, typically, the large the displacement, the more horsepower depandant on tuning.