It is neat to know that power factor is IDENTICAL for either design when used on a drive, as it will be in an EV, so no difference in PF between the two.
It is also neat to know such things like my two Rinehart drives on my 132kw PM synchronous Delphi motors on my 100% electric Equinox conversion will do torque angle control OVER MORE THAN 400% RANGE! So the 'advantage' of induction motor's field weakening like this is a thing of the past too.... my motors have a 'base speed' (where they hit max 350v peak around 2500rpm yet will torque angle control upto 12,000rpm! E und A switerland also makes PM motors to do similar - it is also VERY good to know that if the drive dies while running at these speeds, the motor back emf will instantly resort to physics and try to be this same 4x higher than 350v! Curt, this is an extension of the ServoStar buried magnet patent you are familiar with from our drives; I can send anyone who wants it the Delphi speed,volts,amps,efficiency, torque angle data in a spreadsheet....
Also since PM just make an electric field, and so far as published, do not make energy, the only difference between induction and PM ac motor inefficiencies is a bit of I2R losses to make Isq, and with tweaking, the induction motor now can be about the same 90-95% IIRC efficient as the PM motor. Hopefully some of the research being done with magnets will become fruitful and actually add to the energy output of a "motor" one day, similar to today's heatpumps... I know one client we are doing the controls for on just such a patent project believes they are there already. google the likes of PM space boots or alternative energy with magnets and see what has and is being investigated...
Normally a PM motor's 3-6x lower inertia helps them be much more responsive for accel/decel, but since the reflected inertia of the EV mass is so much higher than even the induction motor, this advantage goes away also.
Yep, the induction motor probably weighs 2-3x more than the PM motor, so this seems like a clear advantage for the PM model; but with liquid cooling, the induction motor can be much lighter also, so the weight advantage may be minimized in time too, to allow the lower cost to be the advantage.
I suspect the induction motor will gain market share in EV faster than PM synchronous motors for these reasons.