No. 10 inch pounds = about 1.13 newton meters.
1.13 Nm (1 Nm = 8.851 inch pounds)
You use a 5 to 1 torque multiplier and pull 494 newton meters.
force times length is the dimension for Work or Energy or Torque. Some examples are Newton meters (equivalent to Joules), inch pounds, foot pounds. The pounds are pounds force, not pounds mass.
The newton metre is a unit of torque (or moment).
There is no SI unit for torque. Torque uses a compound unit such as Nm in the SI system. Also see 'related links' below
What horsepower is 18.5 gross ft lbs of torque?
Newton-Meters
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
20 foot-pounds equates to approximately 27.1nM
Newton-Meters
What is the torque of a 500 Newton force applied to a 30 meters wrench?
According to the Chilton manual, the torque settings are 15 to 20 foot pounds or 21 to 27 Newton Meters.
You use a 5 to 1 torque multiplier and pull 494 newton meters.
Newton meters (Nm) or foot pounds (ft-lbs) are the most common types. But Nm is the more common one.
force times length is the dimension for Work or Energy or Torque. Some examples are Newton meters (equivalent to Joules), inch pounds, foot pounds. The pounds are pounds force, not pounds mass.
The torque specification for the rocker arm nut on a 1997 Chevy Cavalier is 22 foot pounds. This is the equivalent of 30 newton meters.
The second version (mN) would likely be confused with milli-newton.