But you'd need some sort of input as to how much power being asked for, being put in, rpm .vs. theoretical should be rpm etc. We kind of do this in the power plants to keep an eye on mvar creep, if something gets too out of whack, you get a Power Level Imbalance Runback. It's something like, You are giving it enough energy / torgue to generate 500 megawatts, yet you are only putting out 440 mw...something is wrong, back it down NOW. In your case it'd be, you should only be doing xx rpm, or yy ramp rate yet are hitting zzz. excess..back it down NOW. The math can get a bit complicated, and very dynamic quickly too !! it'd have to also honestly be millisecond accurate to be of any real use too. How good is a traction control that kicks in only after the wheel been spinning out of control for 2 or 3 seconds. When you are already doing 60 mph, by that time, you are already lowsiding into the ditch. Worse case is this will probably happen 90 percent of the time during an acceleration, which again, you need to act FAST to be of any use. Remember, some of these bikes can go from 0 to 60 in a few seconds, and driving like THAT is when you are going to need this the most, so yah, it has to be fast.
In an anecdotal way, this reminds me of when I ran over a spark plug in the highway and took out a tire. I was pulled over and on the phone with the tow truck driver, when Fkn worthless ONstar interrupts my phone call to tell me I have a flat tire. Oh wow REALLY!!! that 'data' is not very useful at that point.
Aaron