At this point why don't we get rid of the k prefix and write 59W/g?
Edit:
I was half joking, but various answers mention kW being standard for motors, kg being the SI unit for mass etc. All true, but as used here in a combined unit, which means "power density" it still would make sense IMO. It's not like the "59" tells you that it's a strong motor and hence you want kW to compare it to other motors. You can't, it's just a ratio (power to weigth). W/g just reads much nicer in my head. Or we could come up with a name, like for other units. Let's call it "fainpul" (short fp) for example :)
Or just 2. I like my screen aspect ratios in decimal representation. The "wider" the image, the larger the number. Square would be 1.
It makes it easy to compare ratios: for example the aspect ratio of a movie (say 2.39) to my screen (2.33) and see that I can expect a good fit. My screen is a bit "more square", so there will be slivers of black borders on top and bottom.
Amusingly, given the other thread in here with people sniping each other over the metric system, I'm obliged to point out that kg, not g, is the fundamental unit of mass in SI, because even metric can't get away without some silliness.
But it doesn't. You can talk about micro-motors, implemented on a PCB, like [1] and get a number in the same ballpark. That's the whole point – it's a ratio, it tells you nothing about the absolute size of the motor.
> 59kW/kg
At this point why don't we get rid of the k prefix and write 59W/g?
Edit:
I was half joking, but various answers mention kW being standard for motors, kg being the SI unit for mass etc. All true, but as used here in a combined unit, which means "power density" it still would make sense IMO. It's not like the "59" tells you that it's a strong motor and hence you want kW to compare it to other motors. You can't, it's just a ratio (power to weigth). W/g just reads much nicer in my head. Or we could come up with a name, like for other units. Let's call it "fainpul" (short fp) for example :)
59 fp is a new record for electric motors!
Ah like the old MKBHD "screen has an aspect ratio of 18:9. Or 2:1 because I know my fractions"
Or just 2. I like my screen aspect ratios in decimal representation. The "wider" the image, the larger the number. Square would be 1.
It makes it easy to compare ratios: for example the aspect ratio of a movie (say 2.39) to my screen (2.33) and see that I can expect a good fit. My screen is a bit "more square", so there will be slivers of black borders on top and bottom.
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Because kg is the fundamental unit of mass and kW is typically used for electric motors.
Same reason you wouldn't use m²/s³ even though that's also technically correct.
If "kg" is the fundamental unit of mass, then honestly, why isn't a gram referred to as a "millikilogram"?
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You're thinking of grams and watts.
Kilo is an SI prefix.
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Amusingly, given the other thread in here with people sniping each other over the metric system, I'm obliged to point out that kg, not g, is the fundamental unit of mass in SI, because even metric can't get away without some silliness.
It gives a sense of the functional size required.
Could the motor in question be shrunk down to 1kg, producing 59kW? Probably.
Could it be shrunk down to 1g? No.
But it doesn't. You can talk about micro-motors, implemented on a PCB, like [1] and get a number in the same ballpark. That's the whole point – it's a ratio, it tells you nothing about the absolute size of the motor.
[1] https://tymagnets.com/pcb-motors-and-wedge-magnets/
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Comparison with other motors
kg is the SI unit for mass, I think that would be why
Much better you should post it and somebody mark the banner ridden one for deletion.
'Supercarblondie' manages to hit everything I dislike about automotive marketing online all at once.
Yeah wasnt blondie the name of a dog belonging to a certain historical figure?
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A much better link .. and probably not to late to change it via [edit] on submission in your view..
The YASA link is primary, links to test data and back story, and has more detail substance and authority.