Juerg, that graph is AWESOME!
Tony - while doing these Stromer test runs I instrumented the bike with a highly sophisticated sensor to measure yaw, pitch, roll, acceleration, ride quality, and braking forces. This instrument is commonly known as my butt.
This my take on how these two models feel. I rode the Elite and the Platinum back to back at the same power setting and this is what I observed. The Elite gives the sense of a much more powerful bike from initial movement. The rapid acceleration and strong torque seems to keep yelling at you to go faster because it's shoving you forward with more 'kick.' The Elite likes to live at 20 mph. I find it difficult to to keep the Elite below 17 mph without using unnatural slow pedaling and going any faster than 20 will take more effort. I can go 23-24 mph but this takes a lot of effort to sustain. So, Juerg's data above agrees with how this bike feels to me. Lots and almost a constant band of torque up to about 17-18 mph, then a little more pedaling effort keeps you at 20 mph easily. The motor doesn't cut-out @ 20 mph but assist is minimal. As the graph shows, the torque falls off a cliff.
The platinum, while you know there is something there helping you along, it was much less obvious. You just sort of pedal and all of the sudden you are at 28 mph thinking how in the hell did I get going this fast. The Platinum felt more balanced with the motor to pedaling effort ratio at all speeds. With effort I was able to get the Platinum to about 30 and it felt like the motor was still there. There was not enough room for me to see how fast it could really go. After all these years riding a bike in the 15-20 mph range, it was almost surreal riding a bike at 28 mph. Unfortunately, I was not able to find really good hills to test the Platinum on so I do not know how this plows up hills and if it can do it that fast.
Both are an absolute blast to ride but it all boils down to how you are going to use it. As I stated in my review, I need torque due to the number of stops and the fact that I am always carrying a heavy load with hills. Recently I installed a single wheeled trailer (BOB Trailer) to the Elite and this thing hauls cargo like a diesel truck. I had about 40 lbs of groceries in the trailer and the Elite plowed up a large hill @ 17 mph no problem but it definitely lost its punch moving around this much load. The platinum would fair much worse. With all the stop lights I have to deal with, I want to accelerate away from 0 mph as fast as possible (I beat cars crossing the intersection most of the time) which I get with the Elite. Now, if I had very long, smooth, and safe sections of road on my commute I would get the Platinum without question. Speed = Time Saved, which is more valuable to me.
In regards to the suspension fork, I simply don't need it so didn't spend much time riding the model that had it. I tried the usual stuff I do on my mountain bike during the test ride and took it off road but it wasn't that great. Due to the sheer weight of this bike, you are not going to be able to dampen out all of the crazy bumps you may go over or ever have anything like a mountain bike with only a front shock. I would only recommend the front shock if you are looking for the absolute plushest ride possible. If that is what you are after, I would recommend the front shock and a Thudbuster seatpost to get something on both ends of the bike.
All that said, I'm only 170 lbs. You sir, are a big boy at 6'1" 245. So your mileage may vary. Both the Elite and Platinum may come across as wimps on the hills for you. With a guy of your size, assuming the Platinum can get you to 28mph, you will be a hell of a lot of kinetic energy rolling along. That is going to take some major braking force to stop. I would HIGHLY recommend test riding both models just to make sure it's the right one for you.