John in CR said:
Now I feel compelled to simplify it further. I've got identical everything and two otherwise identical hub motors other than the winding count. Which one is going to have an easier time pulling a laden trailer or hauling my fat ass up a hill, the one with more turns in it's coils or not?
John
Assuming your voltage doesn't change, the higher turn motor will be better suited to pulling larger loads as compared to a lower turn motor. The higher turn motor will produce less power, consume fewer amps, run slower, and run cooler. The slower speed at a given voltage makes it better suited for pulling hills, merely by means of producing less heat. It will not pull you faster, it will not pull more load, it will not produce more torque.
The only exception would be if the lower turn motor were near or beyond stall pulling your hill. In this case it would pull too many amps and cause saturation, producing much more heat than power. In this case a higher turn motor would indeed produce more torque than the stalled out "fast" motor, by means of a higher efficiency.