That and the amount of, torque and power (and therefore acceleration), per degree of throttle rotation.
I think the speculation is that that should not matter, only cruising speed. E.g., the same number of Wh should be required to go from 0 to 60 whether it's done in 4 seconds or 8 seconds, right? From E=(1/2)mv^2.
He's saying that the mode (Eco vs Sport) changes the amount of current / torque delivered per physical position of the throttle.
Separately, for a given amount of current / torque delivery, the energy expended to get to cruising speed varies let's say negligibly.
BUT there's a fun factor to throw in:
- For a given amount of current / torque requested from the throttle,
- The battery voltage will sag by a proportional amount because of internal resistance.
- This will then subtly effect the power delivery in the same manner that operating at a lower SoC will.
- This might also be less efficient generally.
It's more or less negligible, but the point is that it helps with battery power delivery efficiency to smooth out or minimize fluctuations in throttle usage.
I've run tests using a live data logger (the third-party mobile app for Android that Apple's policies make unworkable on iOS) to watch current, voltage, etc. on a pretty high sample rate to understand the effect of the throttle on overall electric power delivery.