>> Confused, why is it different at Zero site.
>>
>> 11 kW ~ 15hp
>>
>> Must be the way they meassure it, a loophole in the 11kW rules.....?
Found it:
This is because of the "continuous power".
In other words, how much power the motorcycle can deliver for a long time, or better "may".
Regarding peak power or torque, the 11 kW Zero S should not give up anything!
As a result, he still has 108Nm and 60hp making him accelerate as fast as a normal S.
The only thing that is influenced is the top speed.
It lies at the Zero S 11 kW (14.4kW battery) at 139 km/h versus 158 km/h at the normal S (14.4kW battery).
The more battery an EV has, the more hp it CAN produce.
So, this is also the difference in hp between 7.2kW and 14.4kW battery (no 7.2kW battery with 11kW performance in the Netherlands tho)
Probably Zero only adjust parameters in motormanagement to be a valid 11kW, just like we can do for the torque in the Zero app.
The drivetrain should be the same.
More from Zero site itself:
Maximum v. Net v. Continuous Power:
–Maximum power (or peak power) is defined as the absolute maximum power that a drivetrain can produce. Electric vehicles are rated on this in regions following SAE standards.
–Net power is defined as the amount of power the motor is capable of sustaining following a three-minute run at 80% of maximum power, according to UNECE Regulation No 85. Electric vehicles are rated on this in regions following EU standards.
–Continuous power is defined as the amount of power the motor is capable of sustaining continuously for 30-minutes, according to UNECE regulation No 85. Electric vehicles are rated on this in regions following EU standards.