2 schools of thought on batteries:
1) treating it as a disposable, max enjoyment, charge whenever it's convenient, or
2) trying get max life out of it.
Mrgold - there are no massive statistics on how keeping it at 20-80% improves the battery life. I tend to trust techies that have come to this conclusion. Overcharging Li batts isn't a good practice, automotive industry concluded the same. If you are worried about long rides with 80% charge, you might need a bigger battery. (Easy to say, I know). Range of ebike is so ridiculously short, they can get away with this because we are pedaling it more than motoring.
Manufacturers that specify "how much charge" you have to put in, to reach 80%, must be kidding. The amount of time needed to reach 80% depends on the amount of charge already there. Since there is no easy way to tell how much charge is in there, you don't know when to stop charging. At best, they would tell something like "If it's empty, charge it 5 hours with our charger for Full charge or 4 hours for 80%".
I've been thinking about this programmable charger:
https://lunacycle.com/batteries/chargers/luna-charger-48v-advanced-300w-ebike-charger/
Don't know how exactly it does those 80-90-100 limits. Not sure that it "doubles" the battery life as they claim, there isn't enough statistical data to tell.
Satiator at +$300 cost is a questionable value because of the cost.