Well I found this online they're trying to state on a typical scooter how fast
can you go based on HP;
"The easiest way I could find to show and explain these was to find and use an online calculator so you could see the results for yourself. The one I ended up using was this
http://www.rbracing-rsr.com/aerohpcalc.html.If you enter the figures I gave you already so 1.0 for Cd and 6.02 for frontal area plus a weight of 428 lbs which is about the weight of a Gilera Runner with a 12 stone person on it. Then you put the speed which you would like to go, or are interested in finding out the bhp needed, you should get the results.
Here are some results and what sort of tuning you would need to get there.
30mph = 1.64bhp. Much less than a restricted 50cc which normally have around 3.5bhp.
40mph = 3.52bhp.
45mph = 4.82bhp. The 45-50mph bhp figures are about spot on for a de-restricted scooter which can range from 4.5 to 6.5.
50mph = 6.47bhp.
60mph = 10.94bhp. Getting into the sport 70cc kit bhp figures and also 125cc 4 stroke bhp specs and 100cc's.
65mph = 13.76bhp. More like the Mid race 70cc kit bhp and the stock 125cc 2 stroke bhp.
70mph = 17.05bhp. A 125cc with just a 172cc kit fitted is around 17bhp and you will now start seeing the bhp figures increasing a lot for not much more mph.
75mph = 20.82bhp. A 172cc with pretty much all the bolt ons.
80mph = 25.05bhp. A street ported 172cc bike with all the bolt ons is around this.
90mph = 35.41bhp. Now you are talking some serious porting and hardly any reliability without a lot of maintenance. Pretty much a sprint bike.
100mph = 48.23bhp. Not even a figure that is reachable by tuning a scooter without nos.
The findings seem to totally agree with what I have found personally when riding scooters and what others have when not referring to the totally inaccurate speedos."
So with our 15Hp we should be able to do 65....