I wonder if two motors would use less energy than one motor climbing the same hill. I am thinking greater efficiency.
Also separate battery and controller, same throttle.
Each motor individually would use less energy but combined they would use more. This is due to the frictional loss in the motors which would be doubled. Also, the inefficiency of the motors (all motors have it) would also be doubled.
The total efficiency would be less. Why would you think it would be greater? Efficiency is input/output.
Greg, I'm not saying you're wrong, but please take a look at the following and let me know if I've got it wrong:
I've used actual dynomometer information for the Golden Motor 36v 500w motor in this example:
- A single motor drawing a current of 17.8 Amps has an output of 451.5 Watts and is only 70.7% efficient.
- A single motor drawing half this current (8.9 Amps) has an output of 260 Watts and is 81.1% efficient.
- Therefore two motors drawing a combined current of 17.8 Amps would produce 520 Watts of power. (Also 81.1% efficient)
According to my calculations, two motors would give an
extra 15% power output for the same input as a single motor.
Therefore I'm convinced that
two motors can be more efficient than one!As these are brushless/gearless motors, the only frictional loss comes from the actual bearings which a standard non-motorised hub also has!
If the same battery is used for both motors, the only negative side would be the extra weight of the second hubmotor, speed controller and wiring.
A bike ridden on the flat would definitely be
more efficient and also slightly faster
using two motors limited to half power instead of one motor at full power!
(I'm not so sure about steep hills though.)I wonder if there any volunteers out there who would like to put my theory to the test and report back with their results?
Alan ps. Efficiency is output/input