How does cid make power?

incorrect as I has been shown a million times via videos and the dyno’s


100% true. IF the only thing you are looking at is the CID.

100% true. IF the only thing you are looking at is the CID.

100% IF the only thing you are looking at is the CID.

Yes it is since HP is the result of torque. Increased displacement will increase torque. IF the only thing you are looking at is the CID.

Yes it will if it was a only looking at the cid only.
The parts of the engine will dictate how much HP will be delivered and how the curve comes in. Here is where you open up the argument to be subject to parts used. And the source of your argument.

Everyone (as far as I know) think it does except you.
It’s funny though because you say HP is from torque and torque pm. The more stroke, the more torque is added. The more rpm you give it, the more hp it makes, this you know and have shown but still say you don’t know the answer but there is your answer, you gave it yourself!
So now you know that you know.


You missed one Rob. Horsepower is NOT the result of torque. It never is. It is the result of torque and RPM. You can have all the torque in the world and without RPM you have zero horsepower.

A quick look at a dyno graph shows this clearly. As torque starts to fall after its peak, the horsepower keeps going up. If you had to have torque to gain horsepower, once torque peaks and starts heading down (or even if it just went flat) you’d lose horsepower.

You absolutely can not ignore RPM in figuring horsepower. And without horsepower a car won’t move.