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Hey, yes in a way you are correct, as you said the faster you go the more power is needed, more power = more torque × rpm.The issue I'm seeing is that each of these Wh/ km charts show useage/ efficiency at max power output. Anytime you go faster, you burn more energy per km.
So, unless I am misunderstanding, for these range tests to be valid the testers would need to normalize for input pedaling assistance AND output power, to properly access efficiency.
More torque = more current, and more current = higher consumption/worse efficiency.
I actually don't like to talk about efficiency in Wh/km, I prefer Wh/100m altitude gain. Now if you look at the right side of the chart they provide the incline 0% and 10%, that's how they say Wh/100m also but in a different way.
Now the second part of your question, yes a stronger 90Nm motor at the same voltage(36V) will use more than an 80Nm motor.
Like you suggested if they would even out the input and output bettwen the systems yes we would see the actual differences but mostly due to how the system is built and how good the components are,etc...
Now I still believe that if we see a difference at max power then that difference would grow bigger at a lower power setups.
Motor engineers try to create a motor system that in their opinion is the best, some choose a low grunt motor(Older Giant PW-X2), some go for high rpm/grunt(Bosch SX), some take a midway approach,...what I am saying is that every motor is built and its firmware programmed for a specific way of riding-thus the differences in feel. The testers would need to know the optimum point of each motor to see where it works most efficient, that's is basically impossible to do and so the max power approach imo is good enough to see the overall difference and I also feel that if a motor can provide it should be tested at what it can provide.
The: Wh/100m is universal, it just shows how much a system is capable of in it's max settings.
In my opinion it would probably be pretty interesting and more of real life picture if they would use a preprogramed trail that incorporates different trail conditions(Uphill, downhill, motor assistance off/on, stop&go,...), basically an good mix of everything, then we would see the real picture.
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