bruto
Penultimate Amazing
I wonder what the maximally efficient speed is for an electric car.
For internal combustion engine cars, from what I understand it's actually kind of complicated. I know that running the engine too slow is inefficient, but so is running the engine too fast. But I think it's even more complicated than just having a peak efficiency RPM. I've read about hypermilers who would accelerate to some high speed and then coast in neutral with the engine off until they slowed down, then accelerate again, rinse & repeat. That suggests that maximum energy efficiency for a gas engine occurs at moderate speeds but while accelerating, so that some of the energy is going to accelerating the car, it's not all going to fighting friction.
This may vary with how the car's engine is set up. I've read in various places that an engine set up to run at a constant middle speed can be most efficient, but that's party because it need not be able to accelerate and decelerate with expected driveability. That's the principle of diesel-electric setups, for example, and for engine driven generators in general. A lot of the inefficiency of automobile engines is in making them able to accelerate smoothly and work well at varied RPM, which used to require, in a carburetor, an accelerator pump (basically a squirt gun that throws extra fuel in) and presumably an equivalent enriching in fuel injection. Without it the car will burp when the throttle is opened quickly (as those of us old enough to have rebuilt a bunch of carburetors might recall).
Long ago I seem to recall a study done by BMW which suggested that the overall best economy was similar to what you've seen, except without the actual coasting. But the idea being that you accelerate to a speed slightly higher than what you want the average to be, then decelerate, and do this in cycles. Part of the rationale for that was that that initial burst of raw fuel on acceleration occurred less frequently.