2.0 litre is 2000cc. There are 1000cc in a litre (1 cc = 1ml). Chances are your engine isn't exactly 2.0 litre, could be 1997cc. Check your log book.
There is 1000cc in 1 liter. So just divide by 1000.
1 liter = 1000 cubic centimeters. To convert from liters to cc, multiply by 1000.
usually the liter count is the cc of an engine. example-- a 1.6 liter engine would be 1600 cc's ( more or less) 1.8 liter= 1800 cc, ect, ect...
cubic centimeters of the engine, for example instead of saying a 1.5 liter engine, you say 1500 cc engine. one liter is equivalent to 1000 cc
cubic centimeters of the engine, for example instead of saying a 1.5 liter engine, you say 1500 cc engine. one liter is equivalent to 1000 cc
1 litre = 1000 cc so 2 litres = 2*1000 = 2000 cc.
1086 cc.
1600 cc
Divide the number of cc by 1000. so 1800 cc = 1.8 liters
1 liter is 1000cc
1.9 liters = 1,900 cc
To convert from cubic inches (CI, or CID) to Cubic centimeters, multiply the CID by 16.89 cc/ci. A 305 CID (cubic inch displacement) engine therefor would be equivalent to a 5151[drop the fraction] CC engine. to convert this to liters move the decimal 3 places to the left (1000 cc = 1 L). so a 305 is a 5.1 or 5.2 liter engine depending on whether you round up or round down.