For the sake of comparison my current pack and controller requires around 600watts to maintain 20mph.
It will almost certainly take about the same power to maintain the same speed. The difference in efficiency between controllers is unlikely to be enough to make a signficant dent in that--it will make *some* difference...just probably not very much.
Also, it will take more power to go faster, and to accelerate more quickly, so unless you limit your system to prevent any usage that is different from your present capabilities, it will end up with enough other power usages to more than make up for any efficiency gains and end up with higher power usage than before.
So here's the part I left out, my current 13s 4p pack has really crummy cells that are rated at 5A max continuous discharge which means that my entire pack can only produce 960 watts max... Assuming an even comparison of 600 watts draw my current pack is running at 62.5% capacity.
But the new pack I'm building 20s 2p is with batteries that have 30A max discharge, which would give me 4320 max watts and assuming 600 watt draw on the new controller (which is probably high, I bet ASI is more efficient at the same wattage and absolutely more efficient at higher wattage) so to assume 600w draw on the new pack would mean it would be running at around 13.9% capacity...
Well, it isn't capacity you're talking about, its' current delivery capability, often listed as C-rate.
That said, it would probably strain the new pack less than the old one, assuming you set the battery current limit and other behaviors and limits of the new controller the same as the old one.
in a perfect world with running a better more efficient controller at a more efficient wattage and running the pack at much lower % of total power capacity I would like to think that my 72v pack with far more advanced cells and a lower mAh capacity could outperform my 48v pack with a higher mAh capacity and crappy cells and outperform in every way in terms of acceleration, raw performance, and distance...
Some thoughts so you understand how this will affect what you expect from your battery:
If you actually use the higher accleration and better performance, you will use more power and the system will be *less* efficient overall than previously, and you will get less range from the pack, assuming that the Wh of each pack is as I previously posted calculations of (that is something you can actually verify using a coulometer or wattmeter, or things like the Cycle Analyst from ebikes.ca...oh, and they also make the Phaserunner family of controllers based on the ASI line, but using their own custom made setup software that is probably easier to use than ASI's).
If you limit the new controller to match the performance of the old controller, the power usages will match, but you will lose the ability to use the higher performance it could give you in those emergency situations.
If you don't limit the new controller to match the old, then even if you manually limit your speeds on the flat roads to match the old speed limit of your system, then every accleration especially from a stop, every ride up a slope of any kind or length, riding against a headwind, etc., will use more power than it did before unless you are very deliberate in preventing that from happening by manually monitoring power usage constantly and self-limiting it.
If the controller supports presets via a display or a switch, then you can use those to create a normal preset for riding with your limits matching the old system, and switch to "unlimited" mode for sitautions you need it and dont' care about extra battery usage.
If it doesn't suport that, you could setup the controller as unlimited, and use the Cycle Analyst as a preset/limiting tool. See the Ebikes.ca CA V3 info page for how the CA works and how you could use it this way if you're interested in the idea.
If it doesn't matter whether or not the new system is actually more efficient than the old, and you really just want the extra performance, then none of that matters, but if you *need* that greater efficiency, you'll have to do something to limit the performance to keep it.
The ebikes.ca simulator is really cool, I did not know about that.... thanks for the heads up..
It can do a lot to help with guesstimates of system usage and modelling...just remember it *is* a simulator so it's output is only as good as the input and the models.
