As we know ebikes power is measured in W and that's what government organizations and manufactures have been using.
So the Shimano E8000 has been replaced by EP8. Here's what gets interesting.. they're no longer revealing W rating for their motors.
According to Grin Technologies in Canada, the 250W Bosch motor was actually generating well of 800W at peak.
Micah Toll also mentioned that government regulation on W rating is "terrible regulation" because the regulation never really specify what the W rating meant. (nominal, maximum or continuous)
So the manufactures would just rate it 250W, 500W or whatever so that it would look compliant but they typically do not reveal maximum rating since they would not want to mess around with the regulations.
Now, looks like manufactures are rating the motor by Nm, not W.
Since everyone knows that W rating is meaningless (because maximum W is almost always higher than rated W), manufactures are moving towards Nm.
But just because they decided to go by Nm, doesn't mean W will physically disappear. What do you think?
So the Shimano E8000 has been replaced by EP8. Here's what gets interesting.. they're no longer revealing W rating for their motors.
According to Grin Technologies in Canada, the 250W Bosch motor was actually generating well of 800W at peak.
Micah Toll also mentioned that government regulation on W rating is "terrible regulation" because the regulation never really specify what the W rating meant. (nominal, maximum or continuous)
So the manufactures would just rate it 250W, 500W or whatever so that it would look compliant but they typically do not reveal maximum rating since they would not want to mess around with the regulations.
Now, looks like manufactures are rating the motor by Nm, not W.
Since everyone knows that W rating is meaningless (because maximum W is almost always higher than rated W), manufactures are moving towards Nm.
But just because they decided to go by Nm, doesn't mean W will physically disappear. What do you think?