D
Deleted member 4366
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Good questions.
1. There are basically two types of system that respond to the PAS setting. Speed control allows full power for accelerating but limits the speed in each level to a different value. Current control limits the power (current) to a different value in each level, but it allows full speed. Oxygen bikes use both. They have three levels of power and 6 of speed, so 18 combinations.
2 Yes it does. Everything becomes more complicated when you reduce PAS or the throttle. Generally, the efficiency curve gets shifted down the RPM range. I haven't yet figured out what happens with current control controllers, but basic logic says to me that efficiency would be lower than a speed control one; however, in practice, there's no noticeable difference. I guess that it gains in some circumstances and loses in others.
1. There are basically two types of system that respond to the PAS setting. Speed control allows full power for accelerating but limits the speed in each level to a different value. Current control limits the power (current) to a different value in each level, but it allows full speed. Oxygen bikes use both. They have three levels of power and 6 of speed, so 18 combinations.
2 Yes it does. Everything becomes more complicated when you reduce PAS or the throttle. Generally, the efficiency curve gets shifted down the RPM range. I haven't yet figured out what happens with current control controllers, but basic logic says to me that efficiency would be lower than a speed control one; however, in practice, there's no noticeable difference. I guess that it gains in some circumstances and loses in others.