Eco isn’t always the most battery efficient.

Shifty

E*POWAH Elite
Aug 29, 2019
249
442
Wiltshire
After completing a few 40k rides now with a circa 550 metre ascent totals. If I ride in eco for full amount of ride it takes me a little longer up the hills and I have to use easier gears obviously.
Comparing this to using the second or third power level (giant 2019 5 levels on Yamaha) on the steep climbs to speed up them.
what i find is I use roughly 5% more batterypower by relying on eco and slogging up the steep inclines in granny gear 1 than I do using slightly more engine power mode and climbing more quickly in say 3rd gear (1-11).
So to summarise there is a sweet spot of time it takes, engine power, cadence and gear on steep climbs that is more efficient than staying in eco.
 

Darren

Active member
Sep 25, 2019
191
245
Warwick
This counter intuitive phenomenon is true for internal combustion engines too. It's more economical to power up a hill and get it over with as soon as possible, using maximum power for a minimal time rather than the green band for longer.
 

wildsau2

Active member
Jul 6, 2018
167
123
Germany, Karlsruhe
lower gear means often higher cadence. always good for saving battery. i‘m on shimano i‘ve tested several times with a powermeter. eco does not save battery it does not consume more. cadence, temparature, wind are the factors
 
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Sapientiea

Active member
Jul 12, 2019
296
192
Netherlands
In the end, total energy needed to get your bike and you up a hill remains the same for both eco and trail. You are not putting in the same amount of energy in eco as you do in trail simple. The shimano motor has a peak watt of 500 and continuous watt output of 250. The 500 watt is used when you just start to pedal. Could be that you are just using this more because you are really dropping the cadence too low. Or maybe a little speed in trail is overcoming this and you ride smoother. Either way, 5% is not very significant
 

Swissrider

Well-known member
Nov 1, 2018
362
381
Switzerland
If you keep cadence to about 70rpm, which seems to be sweet spot for most motors and use a heart rate monitor or power monitor, it should be possible to monitor how much effort you are putting in. As I posted the other day, I’m going to do a big climb twice, once in trail and once in Turbo and then see how much battery I’ve used after each climb. Turbo will be quicker so I won’t use the battery for so long and trail will use less power but will take longer. I use Turbo a lot and I am not convinced there is that much difference, and it’s more fun!
 

Pdoz

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Feb 16, 2019
1,112
1,206
Maffra Victoria Australia
The 2019 giant had different torque curves in eco vs the higher power modes - it would drop off assistance from about 60 cadence in eco , around 70 in the next 2 levels and around 80 in the higher settings. Or at least that's what it felt like. This produced a paradoxical effect of worse economy in eco in high load settings because it was hard to maintain high cadence and efficient human input.

From 2020 onwards, the pwx 2 motor supports higher cadence , so you can now spin around 80 cadence in eco and still get assistance- MUCH better economy in eco.

I spend way too much time thinking as I spin the cranks
 

MB1

Member
Dec 28, 2019
35
30
Cumbria
As most on here have indicated, from many years experimenting on the same route, I believe cadence is the significant influence in this. If you look at the motor curves, they’re mainly most economical when cadence is high, 70-80 rpm. 90 if you can sustain it, which is common on road bikes. Regardless of mode, the battery always lasts longer if you use the gears and spin. It’s also good for you?
 

Sidepod

Active member
Sep 2, 2020
584
395
Oxford
Kind of interesting this yet at the same mind numbingly boring. If we had hardware that was fit for purpose this wouldn’t even be a thing. Roll on batteries that last weeks as opposed to 75% of required ride distance.
 

steve_sordy

Wedding Crasher
Nov 5, 2018
8,405
8,642
Lincolnshire, UK
Even if you use the most efficient cadence, the faster you are going the higher the resistance from the air. That increases by the square of the speed. So if you really want max efficiency, stay in the right cadence band, and stay slow.
But I don't want to do that!
 

B1rdie

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Subscriber
Feb 14, 2019
831
1,033
Brazil
Out of theory, we would discuss for eternity the phisics of this, aside of wind drag there is momentum involved so if wind speed is not constant and the terrain is not level, then carrying momentum favours the faster rider. but out of experience I got convinced that keeping higher cadence improves the efficience of the rider/motor combination to the point that if you can sustain above 80 rpm cadence the difference of theremaining charge of the battery at the end of a 30km 1.000 m high ride, between using eco or trail will be minimal.
 

B1rdie

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Subscriber
Feb 14, 2019
831
1,033
Brazil
Just forgot a very important detail: my ebike is set to US 32km/h speed and these rides are made at average speed above 25 km/h.
 

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