After 18 years or so of riding "legacy"/non eMontagues, and knowing how tight the space was in my plane, when econversions first came on my radar I assumed they would not be practical for my particular application. Much to my surprise....., other then the expected added weight, it didn't change a thing, relative to how it stows in the plane. My first Mont conversion was an older model, rim brakes, with a BBS02, and the stock derailleur system, that worked OK but as I found out more about things e I realized what I really "needed" was a BBSHD, with tweaked programming (Luna Cycle, my supplier of choice) a Paratrooper Pro model, with disc brakes, and the biggie, the Rohloff hub. It all fit up like it was meant to be, and of course my chainline is now perfectly straight 100% of the time no matter what gear I'm in. I've had 50+ mile road rides (Ketchum ID to the top of Galena Summit and return) and too many to mention trail rides in remote locations, some just a mile or so and some much more. These are not established bike trails so I never know what I'm getting into. Other than flat tires the Mont has never let me down, and now I ride with a spare tube plus a tire patch kit, plus slime etc., and a 52 VDC air compressor and/or C02 bottles. My usual battery setup is a 6 AH Mini (now discontinued by Luna, darn it, it fit on a rack I built on my vert post, and was plenty for the shorter rides) plus a 11.5 AH Panasonic pack that hangs off the main tube in a padded bag I made, quick snap catches secure it, plus an addition 11.5 battery I can throw in a backpack or if I have the rear rack on, on it. This combo gives me lots of options, and I have yet to be caught with a dead battery, I am constantly amazed by these batteries!I would love to see some more pics of your Montague and I'm sure I'm not alone.
This pic of the bike on a lookout was after I landed in the valley below, 2K below, after scouting out the trail from the air.
I posted a writeup up on the Montague company blog 2 or 3 years ago, back when e bikes were still getting dissed much more than now, and they posted it but I think took it down later. Now, in 2021, I see they have jumped on the bandwagon and offer their own e bike! The next one was on the edge of the Frank Wilderness Area. The next a 9,000' high ride up from a dirt strip at 6K, to an old fire lookout outside of Sun Valley. The Travoy trailer, being used to carry a snowboard. The final one is a good shot of how I carry the batteries, and a recent mod, a larger "Dirt Wizard" tire, the biggest i can fit, the rear remains stock as there is no room to go bigger.