I am looking for an ebike with an upright riding position that will do well on paved roads, gravel, single track, and dirt. An "all around" bike.
There are, generally speaking, no bikes in shops to try out, so I was wondering what your opinion was on the bikes I've listed above. Which would be a good choice? Thanks for your help.
@timacn: Dewey has given a good answer. Let me, however, tell you something I learned from my own experience:
An "all-rounder bike" doesn't exist.
- e-MTB will be great off-road, painful to use in the city
- A city oriented e-bike will be hopeless off-road, especially on single track
- So called "gravel e-bike" is the most universal but it is not comfortable, requires riding it in road-bike position, and is not equipped.
I wouldn't dare to take the Splice-E off-road. It looks a city e-bike to me.
Dew E is a proper gravel e-bike with flat handlebars. It is even equipped. Not an off-road e-bike.
El Kahuna is a proper e-MTB. In the city, you will suffer from tyre noise, and forget riding it fast.
If an universal e-bike existed, it would need to meet contradictory goals. For instance, fenders are simply dangerous off-road. In e-MTB, it is possible to replace noisy knobby tyres with all-rounders such as Johnny Watts but such tyres won't meet the demands of a technical single track. And so on and so on.
When I bought my full-suspension e-MTB, I loved it off-road, hated on-road. Eventually I decided I didn't need an MTB. I brought my Vado to the level of a heavy, flat-handlebar, and equipped "gravel bike" but I enter off-road with real reluctance, and riding there makes funny looks of MTBers
"How can you ride with no suspension in the forest?"