This is great information, thanks for sharing evtricity! I'm sure just about everybody on this site is as curious and excited as I am to find out how much of this can be applied to the 2016 Zero lineup using the IPM motor. I think there is going to be a lot of new learning that takes place when those things get into the hands of hot rodders!
In the spirit of spreading knowledge....
The key highlights are 100% torque from 0 rpm and a tapering of that torque beyond 2350rpm (default motor max is 6,000rpm). I asked some forum members about what would happen if I increased these settings and was told to watch out for two things - motor cutouts and to stay within the 6,000rpm limit. I was also told that field weakening limits motor performance as rpm increases and so I can't be like a kid playing with his Dad's graphic equaliser and put everything up to the max!
Back EMF is your enemy, not field weakening. Field weakening is a technique that can be used to overcome back EMF. The EMF created by the spinning magnets generates a voltage in the stator coils. This voltage cancels out the voltage being applied by the controller. This is referred to as back EMF because when you apply a voltage to the stator coils the current creates a magnetic field that spins the magnets/rotors and the spinning magnets then generate a magnetic field BACK which opposes the magnetic field created by the current in the stator coils.
Volts from controller - volts from back EMF = working voltage.
At low RPM the voltage from the controller is high and volts from back EMF is low so you have lots of working voltage. As RPM increases the working voltage approaches zero.
Zero working voltage = zero torque
Basically, the harder you push the more it pushes back. But field weakening limits the amount it pushes back.
Field weakening basically allows you to keep positive working voltage at high RPM. Field weakening can be applied to SPM motors but requires LOTS of current and you need to have a better cooling solution because of the amount of heat generated.
IPM motors are perfect candidates for field weakening and it can be done at the power levels required at lower RPM. As a result IPM motors can hit much higher RPM without additional cooling required
2015 Zero SR Final drive ratio = 30/132 and should hit 101.9 mph at 6100 RPM (Zero claims 102 mph top speed)
2016 Zero SR Final drive ratio = 30/130 and should hit 101.8 mph at 6000 RPM (again a claimed top speed of 102 mph)
2015 SR uses an SPM and 2016 SR uses an IPM. Based on the ratio of sustained speed to top speed used on previous Zero's, since the 2016 SR can sustain 95 mph it should be able to hit a top speed of 114 mph
2015 SR top speed/sustained speed = 102/85 = 1.2.
1.2 * 95 mph = 114 mph (113.7 mph at 6750 RPM using 30/130 gearing)
Yet the 2016 SR is limited to 102 mph which is only about 6000 RPM (101.8 mph) with the 2016 gearing. hmmm
When you say "cutouts" what do you mean? Like you get when you hit temp limit?