10 inch-pounds is approximately 1.13nM
This is just like asking how many pounds are there in a foot. A kilogram is a measure of weight, and a meter is distance. American?
1.22 meters.
Meters can't equal pounds because meters measures in length and pounds measure mass.
8.36 square meters.
86 Newton meters is equivalent to about 63.36 foot pounds.
One foot-pound is equal to approximately 1.356 newton-meters.
8.851 inch-pounds = 1 Newton-meter so 885.1 inch pounds
You could have 'newton-centimeters', or 'newton-inches', or 'pound meters' etc., but you can't have 'newton pounds'. Torque is (a distance) x (a force), but 'newton pound' is (force) x (force). Whether or not that has any physical significance at all, it's surely not torque.
10 inch-pounds is approximately 1.13nM
14nM is about 10.33 ft-lbs.
15 ft-lbs is about 20.34 newton meters.
The question "how many pounds in a newton" is incorrect because pounds and newtons are both units of force, so they cannot be directly converted by a simple conversion factor. However, the question "how many foot pounds in a newton meter" is okay because a foot pound is a unit of work or energy, while a newton meter is a unit of torque, so they can be converted using the definition of work or torque.
One newton is equal to 0.224809 pounds.
One newton is approximately equal to 0.2248 pounds.
One newton is equal to 0.224809 pounds.
One newton is equal to 0.224809 pounds.