Yes, weight is a measurement and torque is power. (just think kinetic energy)
The torque of a servo is how much weight the servo is rated for. Most of the weight ratings will have two different numbers for the rating, one for dead weight, and one for dragging.
There are many different types of measurements. Some of these different types include, volume, weight, density, force, energy, length, speed, and torque.
Torque is the combination of perpendicular distance and weight; it is not a true force
torque/weight ratio of an instrument indicates sensitivity.if a pointer is having less weight, it will be having high torque/weight ratio so that even for a very small deflection pointer starts moving and indicates measured value.
without specifying the force its not possible to find the torque.
The torque numbers are different for each engine. Which engine and year does your car have?
twinsting moment
which bolts are you talking about? every different size bolt has a different torque spec.
Sorry, 230 ft-lbs can't be converted into Horsepower. Torque and Horsepower measure two different things...like Gallons (Volume) and Pounds (Weight) are units for two different measurements.
BMW M3 is design with their engine specs, any changes to this car like different engine size, torque or weight, will alter the suspesion dynamics and handling not to metion weight distribution ratio.
yes, this is true when anyone increases our weight then no-one can't control oureself .( friction *weight).& increase the force .force is (torque*weight).hence friction increase with weight.
Many bits of data relate to an engine's rating.Efficiency (energy in to energy out); power output; torque (the strength of the turning force); weight to power comparison; and so on.