The torque produced by a motor is typically in relation to the current being drawn, and the Magic Pie 5 is set by default to draw a maximum battery current of 25A, which is approximately 20% more than the 21A for the Magic Pie Edge.
In addition to this, as the Magic Pie 5 is a larger diameter motor than the Magic Pie Edge, therefore it should produce about 11% more torque for the same current draw.
If my figures are correct, a single Magic Pie 5 drawing 25 Amps of current should theoretically produce about
22.2% more torque than a single Magic Pie Edge drawing just 21 Amps.
Unfortunately, there are no dynamometer test figures available for these motors showing the torque produced relative to the current draw at very low rpm, so it is impossible to say what the difference in torque would be between a single Magic Pie @ 25 Amps compared to a pair of Magic Pie Edge motors drawing the same combined 25 Amps
(12.5 Amps each) at very low speed.
I would expect a pair of Magic Pie Edge motors running at half load to be more efficient than a single Magic Pie 5 motor running at full load, and this increase in efficiency could probably increase the available range using the same single battery by as much as 9~10%.
However, if you really need the absolute maximum torque for climbing steep hills, a Pair of Magic Pie 5 motors and dual batteries to enable maximum current to be used continuously would be a better option, or even four motors, one on each wheel:
Alan