In the article I cited, the difference between the Rohloff and the Vario is a 11% additional wattage loss due to drive train inefficiency. The Rohloff and the derailleur systems test out at 95% efficient while the Vario is at 84% efficient.
28MPH * 95% = 26.6MPH. Do you have the Rohloff, and if so, can you do 27MPH continuously, at least on flat ground? Do you feel like the bicycle is providing 275% to 340% of your effort towards that 27MPH continuous,
assuming you can even achieve it?
I have had access to a HS Vario for ~2000 miles now and 28MPH * 84% = 23MPH, which is about the actual limit of the Vario on flat ground. I find this acceptable, except that up hill it's about half that, hence my complaint above.
Clearly the bike is wrong for you as you want something that will go fast uphill, you don't care about going much distance, can deal with having to charge a battery after less than 20 miles and apparently don't care much about the comfort of a front or rear suspension. I like those things and find them more important than hot rod performance (which I like too just not as much).
Many assumptions in that statement. Trail quality where I live is poor and I'd love to have a comfortable front and rear suspension. And unlike most of America, I could even spend the full $12k on a bike that can deliver that functionality. But I shall not, not on a bike that carries 13MPH up hill
in Turbo mode.
This hot rod performance is often referred to as Turbo mode. I would expect Turbo to really deliver the mail, having a major sacrifice to battery life. I don't accept 13MPH up a slight hill over an overpass as "Turbo." Maybe Tour or Sport, but when i click into Turbo, I expect to sit at the limit (minus efficiency losses) of advertised..
not half that. I think the bike is capable of it, and Chris mentioned above that reflashing the computer can unleash more, so that could serve as proof that there is more to be had. And as I first mentioned, I think R&M should allow the end user an
actual Turbo mode, one that does not do but 13MPH up a slight incline.
And apparently I am not the only one, as I didn't start this thread, the OP had similar concerns, especially given his experience on older versus newer, slower models.
In other threads I have told other users to spend the extra cash and get the R&M over other, inferior models. But that was prior to the 2020 offering - one major deficiency I have had with the Gen3 motors is that there is a lack of oomph. I had hoped to see that rectified in the Gen4s, but here is our first thread, a guy with the 400% Gen4, came right in complaining about lack of oomph, so I don't feel my claims are spurious or outlandish.