Hello Mark and Andy,

Power (in watts) equals the torque (in Newton times meter) times the rpm 
(in turns per sec) of the motor shaft times Pi. You figure that out in 
those funny imperial units.

Peter



andy pugh schrieb:
> On 11 August 2011 11:39, Mark Wendt <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>   
>>     So, that, and looking at some of the other servo motors and how
>> they convert, gives me about a .739 conversion factor to go from watts
>> to oz-in and a 1.353 conversion factor to go from oz-in to watts.  A
>> watt is a unit of power though, so does it always translate that nicely
>> for torque factors?
>>     
>
> No, I am afraid that is a totally spurious calculation.
>
> You need to compare power with power, and torque with torque.
>
>   


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