It's lighter and more powerful. Thus power to weight ratio is better. Lets do the maths using your figures.
750watts at 6.8kg = 110 watts per kg.
1000watts at 6.26kg = 160 watts per kg
(110 - 160 / 110) X 100 = 45% increase in power to weight performance.
It also delivers the power more smoothly with the encoder system built into the rear wheel.
If you are trying to convince people that a 45% motor system power to weight performance advantage, combined with a DC drive system that is being stabilised by an encoder system that is sampling every 50mm of forward movement, compared with every 2.2 metres in a Bosch system. If you are saying this is not a significant performance advantage. Then you are not really telling a very convincing story.
And where this superiority will provide the most advantage, is in technical climbs, where power to weight and traction control is most critical. Carrying less weight with more power and stability when climbing helps a lot. And this is what I experienced and witnessed in that race.
BTW ...... What appears to be a resonable climbing test between Avinox, Bosch and Specialized has been done. On average on all different types of climbs. Amflow/Avinox is about 13% faster than Specialized. And 20% faster than Trek/Bosch.
The Bosch is 10-20% more efficienct once these motors are normalized for the same power, therefore a 600w Bosch battery is equivalent to an imaginary 660-720w Avinox battery. There are tests that have shown this, several in fact. So in a 'meters climbed per KG' it would seem the Bosch is technically 'lighter'.
The Avinox needs a bash guard where-as the Bosch naturally provides protection. The E13 bash guard weighs 265 grams.
The Bosch has internal sensors that sample 1000s of times per rotation, which is why you can press your foot on the pedal of a Bosch with no movement and the torque alone will have you accelerate away. Where-as the Avinox requires cadence to initiate, so you have to spin the cranks to get going. The valve stem sensor that the Bosch uses is just for max speed limiting.
The DJI motors pedaled well when shut off, and rattled like crazy. The Avinox motors are like pedaling through mollasses when shut off as the gear lash was tightened, so now they don't rattle. This also likley reduces efficiency further. The Bosch uses a freewheel that disengages so no noise and very easy motor off pedaling.
Multiple people have reported that swapping the long 800w Avinox battery for a 600w dramatically improves handling. So yes, it looks good but is in fact a performance negative.
You may or may not care about geo-politics, 1st world living standards, etc. But one is a Chinese company and one is European. I buy from both regions personally but really try and support American & European manufacturing when possible.
The changes to the Bosch CX-R motor are 3 things: !) Ti shafts which saves 150 grams, 2) Ceramic bearings, 3) and they allow a more aggressive 'Race' tune. It's not correct when the magnesium case is listed for the CX-R, as all Gen5s have that, although the CX-R is a different color. I did order a frameset (Antidote) with the CX-R. It's my opinion that the CX-R should be even more efficienct due to the bearing upgrade as that's what high quality ceramic bearings do. Personally I like doing more with less. I do think that Bosch should make the CX-R the standard motor. But it seems that most people are blown away by power and slim looks and this extra expenditure from Bosch probably would not move the needle.
Where the Avinox is ahead is: 1) Aesthetics, 2) absolute power beyond the Class 1 standard. If these are priorities for you, the Avinox is the superior unit. Otherwise, I choose the Bosch as I think it's a better motor for the reasons listed above.
If my Antidote deal fell through for some reason, I'd either go with the Regulator CX, the Rogue (with an Avinox) or very possibly the new Trek Fuel EXE with the HP60 & 580wh battery. All would be amazing in their own way.