BHP = Brake Horse Power, the strength of the engine CC = Cubic Centimeters, the volume of the combustion chambers
125cc 85cc
cubit centimeters
This is a question that cannot be answered. A volume of space does not equal energy production. You could instead ask "How many cc's are required to make 1 BHP?"
If you mean cc as in from a motorbike it stands for centimetres cubed. It is a unit of Volume. 1 cc = 1 ml
They are not convertible units as they measure different things.
cc is used to know about the engine size.....where as bhp tells you how much power is delivered at shaft ....it doesn't mean that larger engine size will produce more bhp than smaller one....both are different.....cc - cubic centimetres . to measure the engine displacement .bhp - brake horse power . to measure the power of a vehiclet's just a way to compare engines.The number of cc's the related to an engine, is the size of the engine. The actual size of the combustion chambers where the fuel is burned. Normally, the higher the cc's, the more fuel burned, therefore the more power.bhp is the actual horsepower put out by the engine as built, before attached to the car, which will be lower, as a nominal amount of horsepower is needed to turn the driveshaft and drive gears.t's just a way to compare engines.
Early cars had a 1895 cc, 4 cylinder, 8 valve, 105 bhp engine. Later they had a 1796 cc, 4 cylinder, 16 valve, 114 bhp engine.
yes they do communicate very well so the is your Question
No don't think so it goes by the cc. not what you do to it.
16 for a 50cc, 17 for a 125cc - 250cc, 21 for any cc
Treat them as the same, though by original definition, the cc and ml are very slightly different.