And your reason for leaving the unit 'g' off in your original post was what, then?
Your presentation of equations is sloppy to say the least.
I second the motion for terribly sloppy presentation. Here is why:
It was never "shown that they weren't too small", not only are the motors ridiculously small for such a large mass but the wheels are ridiculously large, I have (admittedly) belatedly done some calculations.
1/4hp @ 125rpm = torque 10.5 lb.ft, tyre radius 15inch, mass fully loaded 400lbs.
No Back-up for the figures.
F = 10.5/1.25= 8.4
Formula used not identified, units used not identified, "1.25" number not identified. Now I could figure out which formula was used and where "1.25" came from from the context, but I am willing to bet not everyone could.
8.4/400 = 0.021
A number divided by a number equals a number. Again, no formula, no units. Again, I could figure those out from the context, but not necessarily everyone could.
0.021*32.18 = 0.68 ft/s/s or 0.2m/s/s (more than 13s to make it to 10kph)
and again, your result is in the meaningless terms of ft
2/s
4, the square of acceleration.