Your description sounds more like the use case for a hub motor, not something that needs the drive train to allow for aggressive inclines. Maybe your description is missing a couple important details.... but then again since you are talking about the "Majority" (not the majority on this forum) I have to say I thought you agreed a hub motor was better for the "majority".
Thanks for your comment!
I do agree that a nice geared hub motor would suffice for majority of use cases and it can be done at a price point of ~$2K to $2.5K
The challenge is to pair it with a reliable torque sensor. A system that works day in day out without going bonkers is not a trivial thing.
In my understanding, many of the hub motors are going away not because they are inherently bad but because manufacturers are unable to pair it with a reliable torque sensing system.
Otherwise, hub motors can be an amazing platform for majority of the use cases. It is one reason, Grin Technologies still advocates hub motors and don't sell BBS-HD motors. if you pair a nice MAC motor with a very reliable torque sensor, it will be an amazing performer.
I have more than 15,000+ miles on Stromer bikes, another 8000+ miles on BH bikes and both of them used TMM4 sensors. The BH bike with 750W motor would surge at times, not always but sometime.
Stromer, when working, is a fantastic bike but occasionally, it would have electronic glitches. When things go bad, it can be hard to diagnose and get it back to proper working condition unless you have a very competent dealer. Why do you think companies like Rad, Aventon, Magnum are still sticking with cadence sensors?
They know the trouble involved in putting together a good torque sensor+hub motor system. Juiced was able to make it work to a certain extent but it is not as fool-proof as a Bosch or Yamaha system.
The TMM4 or bottom bracket sensors get exposed to wide magnitude of forces coming from the frame and over time, this lead to complex issues. Whereas in a system like the Yamaha or Bosch, controller and torque sensors are tucked away in a place where they are not exposed to certain kind of forces but still retain high level of accuracy.
From 2016 to 2019, I have ridden mid-drive systems mostly and I never dealt with torque sensor problems, not once. If only we can replicate such a thing on hub motor bikes, it would change things.
Paul has a lot of experience building motors and tuning it with a nice torque sensors and we are hoping to launch the hub motor bike once the testing is complete. That project is in the works and we should have the prototypes ready next month if everything goes well.
In comparison, the Bosch Gen 4 system paired with Gates drive and Rohloff hub will make for a very low maintenance, lightweight and agile bike that can handle varied conditions.