Okay, this is probably a theoretical question that has little use, but it has my curiosity about what I "think" I know.
My naive understanding is that when a motor manufacturer lists the specs for a motor and provides a "kV" value, that tells me what the motor RPM performance should theoretically be for a "no load" configuration. So, for a motor with a kV of 1000, if I were to hook up a 3S LiPo and let it run at full voltage, then it would be spinning at 11,100 +/- RPM. Since we put a prop on the motor and load it down, as the prop gets bigger and has more pitch increasing the load, keeping the voltage at a constant level, the current draw goes up and max RPM is going to go down up until the motor burns out.
Question 1: Is this understanding close to correct?
Question 2: Are there any "rules of thumb" or experimental understanding about the amount of decrease in measured RPM as the load increases? (Okay, I recognize that this is probably highly dependent on specific motors.)
I've come to these questions from my perspective that we are dealing with an optimization (partial) problem for several different parameters. Some of these are independent, and some are functions of combinations of other parameters. Having some insight into practical, available RPM from a motor for a given cell configuration might be useful.
TIA,
Jim Howell
Huntsville, AL