olefud wrote:Electric motors have greatest torque at zero RPM and rather quickly output diminished torque with higher RPM. Not to provoke a sometimes touchy subject, but it’s power that counts not torque.
Thats not exactly true anymore with the way that modern brushless DC motors are controlled. The windings are rated to a particular current, and this gives you a rated torque. This torque is available to you from 0RPM up until the point at which the back emf starts to reduce the speed. So you get something like this:
Basically, it is the bottom half of a typical theoretical DC motor curve which has a linear torque drop-off from the stall torque to the no load speed. While the motor can mathematically still produce much higher torques at 0 RPM, the current rating of the winding simply does not allow it. So what you have is a normal "triangular" Torque vs speed characteristic but "chopped" at a torque limit imposed by the current limit of the windings.
You can go over this limit for short periods but it will heat up the coils because they are operating beyond their rated current. This is why most motor manufacturers will give you a peak torque (current is over the winding rating) and continuous torque rating (current is at the rated level of the winding).
These motors can certainly be run in motor and generator modes. I think these are used as KERs in F1 currently but I'm not sure about that.