MichaelC
Well-Known Member
On your chugging a drink analogy - it kind of proves *my* point, I think: Whether you sip or chug, the big gulp is in your belly; the rate makes no difference. The experience is different (fun acceleration vs. boring creep to speed), but the result is the same.
I just look at the torque curve of an EV (it's not a curve, but a straight line) and imagine that the potential energy of the trons delivered correlates directly to kinetic energy in the car, unlike the bent curve of an ICE, where, under the conditions of acceleration, energy in does NOT equal speed out.
Agreed. I misunderstood your intent behind "efficiency" and went down the "optimize for miles per kWh" path.
As illuminated by the additional discussion, the amount of power required to achieve a certain speed in an EV is impacted more by the physics of moving the vehicle in its environment than the rate of power delivery.