I assumed the Decathlon figures were input too from the battery to the controller which is more easily measured and just simple DC. Also when you say 12A controller do you mean sustained/rated current or peak/maximum/current limiting figure? I've seen quite a few 250W controllers which are 7A rated and 10-11A peak current. However on some of the 24V 20" wheeled ebikes they have absolutely tiny controllers. Also if a controller is dual voltage but rated to 7A lets say so 7x36V gives you the 250W then that 7A rating still applies to 24V doesn't it so its 7x24 and down to 168W approx?Don't get confused between engine output and engine input. The Argos bike has 8A input, which is about 200w output under ideal conditions, but when climbing, it would drop to about 144w. Also, I wouldn't trust those figures in that manual. How do they get those figures? They would imply that they use a current control controller, which I doubt they have.
The 24v Decathlon/BTwin folding bikes have 12A controllers, so, even with only 24v, will be the same power as the Argos one.
I've seen so many reviews of 20" folding ebikes over the years and despite their smaller wheels many are criticised for lack of power/torque especially the 24V versions. I'm not defending the lack of power of this ebike just that I think many similar spec ebikes are the same or worse in reality especially when so many others have smaller capacity battery packs and often smaller hub motors on the front. It's common to see 20" wheel ebikes with very low capacity 24V battery packs and very small front hub motors. I think there is a strong connection between battery pack capacity and controller current rating to protect the battery pack. You are not going to get 12A sustained current out of a 120Wh or 144Wh 24V battery pack for very long especially if basic Chinese cells and perhaps only 2 cells in parallel. I mean you have to be realistic, 120Wh battery can only sustain 400W for probably less than 20 minutes likely less than 15 minutes as cells do not produce the same overall energy if discharged faster.
If such an ebike only gives 15 minutes of assistance that is a range of about 3-4 miles based on a average speed of 10-15mph. The discharge rate of ebike battery packs has to be much lower to get up to the claimed 20miles range. Decathlon are stating I think up to 40km range so about 25miles range or about 2 hours riding so their wattage figures seem accurate to provide that range with the supplied battery. Decathlon are quoting 30-50km range with a battery pack of 200-299Wh (yes that is how they list their capacity).
Electric Folding Bike E-Fold 500 - Blue BTWIN | Decathlon
With its 20" wheels, steel frame, adjustable stem and seat post, accessories (pannier rack), and battery life up to 50 km, it's the perfect partner…
www.decathlon.co.uk