What you're saying is that in some circumstances, your motor is more efficient than at other times. You didn't actually measure its efficiency. You have to consider that your bike goes through a range of conditions during a typical ride. Do you know at what RPM, your motor develops maximum efficiency and what proportion of time you spend pedalling at exactly that speed?Real life experience:-
I frequently ride my crank driver about 1.5 miles up a very gentle slope that once was a railway line. Probably about 1 in 200.
If I come up in 8th (top) gear I can do 13 mph without pedalling. The motor feels warm to the hand.
If I use 7th gear, the speed remains the same and again the motor is warm.
If I use 6th gear the speed is still the same but the motor is cooler.
I suspect that the motor is more efficient in the lower gear and losing less electricity making heat.
My hub motor cannot do that.
When I did my tests, I had two similar motors with identical controllers, similar weight riders travelling side by side over journeys around 30 miles over varying moderately hilly terrain. Both bikes were fitted with wattmeters to measure consumption. On one bike, the motor drove the crank via a chain, and the other drove the rear wheel directly.