🔍 How to Use the Voltage vs Amps Motor Simulation Tool
Electric motors, batteries, and power systems are often explained using technical terms like voltage, current (amps), power, and capacity — but for many people, these concepts remain abstract.
This interactive tool was built to change that.
Instead of formulas alone, it visualizes how voltage and current are drawn from a battery, how they affect motor speed and power, and why higher current usually means shorter runtime.
Understand Speed, Power, and Battery Runtime the Right Way
This article explains what the tool does, how to use it, and why it’s worth your time.
What This Tool Is (and What It Is Not)
First, an important clarification:
👉 This tool does NOT change the battery itself.
You are not “increasing” voltage or amps inside the battery.
Instead, the tool simulates:
- How much voltage is available from the battery
- How much current the motor draws based on load and demand
In real life, the battery always provides voltage, and the motor decides how much current to draw depending on speed, load, and resistance.
This tool reflects that real-world behavior.
Key Concepts the Tool Demonstrates
1. Voltage = Speed Potential
Voltage mainly affects how fast a motor can spin.
- Higher voltage → higher possible speed
- Lower voltage → lower top speed
In the tool, voltage is translated into a real-world speed estimate (km/h) so it’s easier to understand.
2. Current (Amps) = Force and Power Draw
Current represents how hard the motor is working.
- More amps → more torque and power
- More amps → faster battery drain
This is why climbing hills, carrying weight, or accelerating hard increases current draw.
3. Power = Voltage × Current
The tool calculates real electrical power in watts (W):
This is shown numerically and visually, so you can see how power changes when either voltage or current changes.
4. Battery Runtime Depends on Current, Not Voltage Alone
One of the most misunderstood ideas in electric systems is runtime.
- Batteries are rated in amp-hours (Ah)
- Runtime depends mainly on how many amps are drawn over time
In the tool:
- Higher current = faster Ah consumption
- Lower current = longer runtime
Even if speed stays similar, extra load increases current, which shortens runtime.
How to Use the Tool – Step by Step
Step 1: Set the Voltage
Use the voltage slider to choose the available voltage.
You’ll notice:
- Motor speed increases as voltage increases
- The speed is shown in km/h, not abstract numbers
This helps connect voltage to real movement.
Step 2: Set the Current (Motor Load)
Use the current slider to define how much current the motor draws.
This represents:
- Motor effort
- Load
- Resistance (hill, weight, acceleration)
Higher current means:
- More power
- Faster battery drain
Step 3: Start the Motor
Click Start Motor to begin the simulation.
You will immediately see:
- The motor animation responding to speed
- Battery level starting to decrease
- Estimated runtime updating in real time
- Power output shown in watts
- Ah consumption accumulating correctly per hour, not per second
Step 4: Add Extra Load (Real-World Scenario)
Click Add Extra Load to simulate:
- Riding uphill
- Carrying weight
- Strong acceleration
This does not change voltage, only current draw — exactly like real life.
You’ll see:
- Current increases
- Power spikes
- Battery drains faster
- Runtime estimate drops
Step 5: Observe the Power Graph
The real-time graph shows power over time.
This helps you understand:
- Why short bursts of high power are expensive
- How smooth riding saves energy
- How load affects efficiency
Step 6: Stop or Reset
- Stop Motor pauses the simulation
- Reset restores the battery and clears the graph
This allows easy experimentation and learning.
Why This Tool Is Worth Using
✔ It Explains Abstract Concepts Visually
Instead of memorizing formulas, you see what happens.
✔ It Reflects Real Physics (Simplified, Not Fake)
- Current drains battery over time (Ah/hour)
- Voltage affects speed, not battery size
- Load increases current, not voltage
No misleading “magic battery” behavior.
✔ It’s Useful for Real Decisions
This tool is ideal for:
- E-bike riders
- Scooter users
- DIY battery builders
- Beginners learning electricity
- Anyone confused by volts vs amps
✔ It Teaches Efficiency, Not Just Power
The tool naturally shows that:
Final Thought
Electric systems are simple at their core — but only when explained correctly.
This tool exists to answer one question clearly:
By experimenting, not guessing, you gain intuition that formulas alone can’t provide.