hjns
100 kW
Well, that peak of >80km/h is downhill on a good road without any traffic. In reality I am really chicken
I did a writeup of my conclusions from the temperature readings.
I did a relatively low power commute today. After a day and night raining, the roads are slippery, so I can not do a nice powerride. Therefore, at the end of my commute, temperature was between 70 and 80oC.
At the last traffic light, you can see the temperature drop from 79 to 71oC in about 1 minutes. Driving again for one minute immediately brings the temperature up to 80oC. When I then stop completely, temperature in the first minute goes down from 80 to 72oC. However, once below 70oC, the shedding of heat seems to go much slower, taking 4 minutes to cool down to 60oC, 5 minutes from 60 to 50oC, and 12 minutes to go from 50 to 40oC. Ambient temperature was about 20oC, and I stopped measuring when the motor was 35oC.
Although I did not measure it, it is likely that the temperature drop between 120 and 80oC is linear, like from 130 to 120 and from 80 to 70. Once the wetter is better, I will meausure to prove or disprove that. Therefore, my summary is as follows:
From 130 to 70oC = it takes less than 1 minute or one minute for every 10oC drop.
From 70 to 60oC = 4 minutes
From 60 to 50oC = 5 minutes
From 50 to 40oC = 12 minutes
In conclusion, the higher the motor temperature, the faster the heat shedding, and above 70oC it is almost linear. If the motor winding temperature is more than 120oC, waiting (stopping) for 5 minutes will see a drop in winding temperature of up to a decrease of 50oC down to 70oC. After that it takes much more time to cool down.
Note, these temperature measurements are on a cromotor. The cooling-down profile of another hubmotor is probably very different.

I did a writeup of my conclusions from the temperature readings.
I did a relatively low power commute today. After a day and night raining, the roads are slippery, so I can not do a nice powerride. Therefore, at the end of my commute, temperature was between 70 and 80oC.
At the last traffic light, you can see the temperature drop from 79 to 71oC in about 1 minutes. Driving again for one minute immediately brings the temperature up to 80oC. When I then stop completely, temperature in the first minute goes down from 80 to 72oC. However, once below 70oC, the shedding of heat seems to go much slower, taking 4 minutes to cool down to 60oC, 5 minutes from 60 to 50oC, and 12 minutes to go from 50 to 40oC. Ambient temperature was about 20oC, and I stopped measuring when the motor was 35oC.
Although I did not measure it, it is likely that the temperature drop between 120 and 80oC is linear, like from 130 to 120 and from 80 to 70. Once the wetter is better, I will meausure to prove or disprove that. Therefore, my summary is as follows:
From 130 to 70oC = it takes less than 1 minute or one minute for every 10oC drop.
From 70 to 60oC = 4 minutes
From 60 to 50oC = 5 minutes
From 50 to 40oC = 12 minutes
In conclusion, the higher the motor temperature, the faster the heat shedding, and above 70oC it is almost linear. If the motor winding temperature is more than 120oC, waiting (stopping) for 5 minutes will see a drop in winding temperature of up to a decrease of 50oC down to 70oC. After that it takes much more time to cool down.
Note, these temperature measurements are on a cromotor. The cooling-down profile of another hubmotor is probably very different.