33bhp is a measurement of power, not size. However, I can tell you that the larger lead bikes of today such as the GSXR 100s and Honda CBR 1000s get roughly 100-120 bhp. So depending on the age of the bike it could be as small as a 400.
It depends on the bike, manufacturer, model and setup, but generally more than 25 Kw (33 bhp).
brake horse power.
624cc
Ask your local bike shop, maybe on a FULL licence (not 125) but you would probably need to be restricted to below 33 bhp, not sure
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.
Older models (in fullpower trim) generate 33 bhp, newer EU3 spec bikes with a catalytic converter have 28 bhp. Learner leagal rectricted bikes are limited to 14 bhp.
This bike's engine delivers around 17.5 hp.
Brake horsepower or BHP is the amount of power the engine provides at the wheels. The is in contrast to traditional horsepower ratings which are measured directly at the engine or flywheel.
No on a cbt you can only ride up to 14.6 bhp to ride a 33bhp bike you must pass you full test .
Engine size does not necessarily relate to horespower. Generally speaking larger engines produce more horsepower than smaller ones, but there is no set amount of horsepower an engine of a certain size produces. For example, the 2010 Honda CBR600RR produces about 107 bhp, but the 2010 Honda CBF600N (which uses the same engine, just tuned differently) produces about 76 bhp. Although I would say that since this is a large engine in bike terms, you were looking somewhere over 100 bhp, depending on tuning.
Not if you are in UK. You are restricted to 11kw = 14.6 bhp. See http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Motoring/DriverLicensing/WhatCanYouDriveAndYourObligations/DG_4022547 You will need to do your theory and take an A1 test to ride 33bhp. Or do a DAS and ride what you like. NOTE: Its all changing towards the end of 2008 so get your skates on.
I see a motorcycle that has a 420 bhp engine built into it for some reason and another reference to a 2200 bhp jet engine and another for a 9000 bhp engine, so it could vary quite widely depending on the size of the engine.