I think the holy grail of superb E-biking experience is a motor that is rated for 500-700 watts continuous power output (Brose, Shimano, Bosch have 350 watts nominal, ~600 watts peak) BUT has Brose-like sensitivity and Yamaha-like reliability.
I think it's hard to have a do-it-all motor/setting.
If you look at
Bosch's Gen4 Performance Line offerings - they have a Speed and a CX version. They both max out at 75Nm of torque, but that torque occurs at
different PAS and speed levels. Here's a comparison:
Note that the Speed version only gets to 75Nm in TURBO PAS while the CX version gets there in both eMTB and TURBO. What is also happening is that the SPEED version only gets to 75Nm when going very fast, whereas the CX version gets there at lower speeds (well, it has to since its speed tops out at 20mph). At less than 20mph speeds, the SPEED version is not putting out 75Nm of torque. What's clear (to me anyway) is that the CX version is designed to get you more Nm at lower speeds, because that's what you need to climb off-road, whereas the Speed version uses the extra Nm to help you get up to and maintain speed. Same torque ratings, but for different use cases and so at different motor profiles.
Now the big question is whether there are in fact mechanical differences in these two motors, or whether it's all programming. At any rate, those that think with the Gen 4 that they don't need the CX because the Speed version has "the same torque" are, in fact, missing when that torque comes into play. Putting a Speed motor on your off-road bike because you also want to go fast on-road means you'll be sacrificing climbing abilities.
I believe this puts the Bafang mid-drive and, in fact, any hub-drive motor capability into perspective. At what speed do you want the high torque?
This is interesting to me, because in the
Bafang Ultra programming thread, I'm trying to decipher how those settings work. People have been at it for years now, and we're all still guessing at many of the parameters. I was surprised to see that the different torque settings are not tied to PAS, but are tied to crank rotation speed - and that's regardless of the PAS setting! That itself may be a limiting factor for how natural we can make the Bafang Ultra feel. The PAS settings are just for limiting maximum current - you can't change the torque multiplier for different PAS settings.
Sorry if this has drifted off topic, but I do think it's relevant to the general topic of "torque sensor performance."