LiFeCycle- the difference in motors is really the application. What I mean is, for a given 50V motor wind, about 200Kv, the 3210, 3215 and 3220 make equivalent torque per amp, there's no free lunch. We're running the 3210 limited to 60A (HV80 is limiting here) which gives us a calculated 200ft-lbs of crank torque, which is what you're really after. An equivalent 3220 would still need about 60A to make 200ft-lbs. This is a lot of torque. As other users have noted, in average situations with this much power, you don't use the lower 5 gears of the cassette anymore, more torque probably won't help riding in the low speed regime.
The 3215 and 3220 are very much motorcycle territory. The extra current capacity in these motors means we can reduce the reduction ratio, increase the current and still have 200ft-lbs of torque but at a higher RPM. If we swap the 16t motor freewheel for an 18, 20 or 22t, we can have an overall motor->crankset ratio of 71:1, 64:1 or 58:1.
3210 7turn 80:1 375in/oz = 53A ->156ft-lbs continuous @130RPM (50V)
3210 5turn 71:1 562in/oz = 75A -> 208ft-lbs continuous @ 143RPM (50V)
3220 3turn 64:1 750in/oz = 125A -> 249ft-lbs continuous @ 176RPM (50V)
3320 4turn 58:1 750in/oz = 91A -> 226ft-lbs continuous @ 146RPM (50V)
There's math involved, double check me.
Basically, the larger motors add value above 40kph, otherwise there just isn't enough load on the bike to need the larger currents.
-dave