I popped over to Boulder, Colorado to test the Optibike R8HD at their factory/shop. I stuck the Rohloff in 9th gear and opened the throttle and the thing took off. It was well equipped, well made and just down the road for service. Talking to the engineers they said that their aim was to make a bike as close to a motor bike whilst staying within the letter of the e-bike law (he probably said 'while' not 'whilst', however). That they have achieved this is in no doubt, but it did not appear to have anything to do with cycling. Cycling it manually was unrewarding and uninvolving. With no pedelec just a twist throttle I got no joy from the machine. And it weighed a ton. For people commuting with electric power it may be just the ticket.
I am struggling to find a system that is as much fun, as responsive and natural as the Bosch. My dealer actually suggested that I buy a Yamaha powered Haibike for the winter, and keep the AMT Pros for the dry weather. In the UK, if stevenast's counsel is to be followed there may be 25 days of the year that we could use our mountain bikes off road. This is not a mud fixation it is a desire to cycle every day and I prefer to do it where there is no traffic. If that means I have to change my bearings on the bike every year then that seems reasonable. Spending £1000 a year on SRAM XX0 gear is not. That geared output chainwheel turning 2.5 times faster than the pedal flexes slightly at the bearing under load and allows water in and leads to failure. Having Bosch replace the motor every year out of warranty is not acceptable. There is a large drain hole at the bottom of the plastic motor casing that fills up with dirty water from the front wheel when driving on the road in the rain. It starts grating like it is full of gravel and I have to hose it out to make it stop. The problems seem to centre around all the technology that they have introduced in the Generation 2 performance line. Unless I can find something as fun to ride I guess I will continue to ride where I want, continue to clean and maintain my bike meticulously and continue to pay for repairs. I have no doubt that we will see a revision to this approach and that the next generation is better.