The conversion is: 1 L = 1 000 mL
So 1990 mL is equal to 1,99 L.
How manny 1,990 CC is in a engine size
1 litre = 1000 cc so 2 litres = 2*1000 = 2000 cc.
An ostrich egg can be approx 1.33 litres.
A magnum is twice the size of a standard wine bottle. A standard bottle is 750 millilitres, so a magnum is 1 500 ml or 1.5 litres. A cc and a millilitre are equal volumes.
The cc for this engine is 1,573.
It simply means the volume of a liquid that is necessary to be injected in an animal. "cc" stands for cubic centimeters, which equivalent to mililitres, or mL: 1 cc = 1 mL. So if you are drawing up 3 cc's of medicine, you are drawing up 3 mL's of liquid. In context to litres, that is 0.003 litres you are giving to an animal (1 L = 1000 mL).
2,389 cc a nominal 2.4 litres
11.6 litres
1 litre = 1000 cc so 2 litres = 2*1000 = 2000 cc.
1500 cc is 1.5 litres.
Horsepower and engine size (cc) are not related in the way you mean. A 32 cc engine could be one quarter horsepower or 3 horsepower depending on it's design and how it's tuned. In current Formula One racing, for instance, the engine size is 2.4 litres and many cars produce over 730 hp. - In an average sports car of 2.4 litres you may get 120 hp.
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.
5700 cc is 5.7 litres GM calls their 350 cubic inch V8 engine a 5.7 litre
There is 1000cc in 1 liter. So just divide by 1000.
1500 cc in 1.5 litres
1 litre = 1000 cc so 3.8 litres = 3.8*1000 = 3800 cc.
71 cc = 0.071 litres
20,000 cc = 20 litres