I thought I would resurrect this thread because efficiency came up in the ‘Zero Should Hire a Aerodynamicist’.
So it’s very obvious that the Zero range cuts in half when you drown away at 75 MPH on the freeway. A lot of this is the poor aerodynamics of motorcycles in general, but another factor is electric motor efficiency.
Here are some quotes from the other thread:
How much is energy consumption do to motor inefficiency at high speed and not aerodynamic drag. Gearing could help that.
Almost none; I think the powertrain efficiency is measured about 90%
Electrical efficiency begins to fall away after 3,500 rpm as greater amounts of field weakening are used to extend the rpm range of the motor at the given battery voltage. It will be about 10% less at 5,000 rpm and 20% less at top speed.
Yes, an electric motor is up to 90% efficient, but according to quotes on this forum, efficiency starts dropping at 54 MPH (stock gearing on a S/R).
54 MPH 90%
77 MPH 80%
100 MPH 70%
Another way to put this is, from 54 MPH to 77 MPH wasted heat generation – power that does not even get to the rear wheel- DOUBLES!
It looks like Electric Terry has already figured this out (in post #3) and has went to a smaller sprocket with a practical compromise to torque.