Hi Andy,
I have read and viewed the links you provided and thought they were good.
The NYCE wheels guy explanation was particularly good I thought.
He also mentioned test riding the bikes you think are right for you. This is for me an essential part of the buying process. When I bought my Oxygen I test road it against quite a few other bikes and just preferred it.
I almost wish I lived near his shop, though as an overweight 58 year old asthmatic coupled with the way the US Health system has coped with Covid19, particularly in New York, maybe not.
Just buying a bike online from the specifications and price is a recipe for disaster with perhaps Woosh bikes being an honorable exception and there may be a few others I am unaware of.
Also another important factor for anyone not that interested or capable of looking after their bike themselves should be to source their bike from a good dealer reasonably close to them where they can take it to be fixed if it goes wrong.
After re reading your first post it is mostly reasonable but the part that has probably raised a few hackles was at the end where you are really voicing your strong personal opinion.
"I cannot think of one single positive reason to buy such a bike....
I can only recommend, in the long term, a bike with either a rear (my favorite) or front hub, as they will get you home with the chain removed.
Mid motors won't...
Been there, done that and got the T-Shirt! (I mean that I have ridden home, up hill and down dale without a chain, on a rear hub motored e-bike.)
Mechanically, mid motor bikes are designed for countries like Holland, with basically no hills, far less chain drive stress...! "
Now everyone is entitled to their opinion but to say that mid motors are designed for the flat is really a contradiction of, for me the main strength of a mid motor in comparison to a hub motor where mid motors are better at climbing steep hills.
I got my Yamaha Haibike hard tail for its ability off road and to allow me commute to work using in places quite demanding technical single tracks with steep uphills and down, roots, rocks, sand, mud steps and where my dear old rear hub Oxygen bike would just not have coped or fallen apart in the attempt.
View attachment 35352
I did use the Oxygen on a route to work that included less demanding off road tracks and it coped surprisingly well but only up to a point.
I paid £1400 for the Oxygen and £1750 for the Haibike and although both are good the quality of the Haibike is better and even in its entry level guise has proved tough and durable and very capable in tough off road conditions. Certainly worth the £350 differential in price.
However for relaxed reliable commuting on the road in a not too hilly area a simple cadence sensor rear hub generic Chinese derived bike is all you need and will provide superb value coupled with a vastly de stressed drive system that will last an order of magnitude longer than a crank drive. And yes if you have a now illegal unrestricted throttle it will get you home if the chain breaks. If you are capable of doing so, you will be able to source cheap parts to repair it off the internet.
So if I only rode on the road and wanted a relaxed ride where the bike takes a lot of the strain off the rider I would get a rear hub drive bike. I use my Oxygen for all my errands and shopping trips, or used to before Covid19 struck.
One particular disadvantage of a rear hub motor bike not mentioned and is important to be aware of is issues with spokes breaking in the motor wheel that are quite common.
I had that with mine and did fix it myself but for some people changing spokes and truing wheels is beyond their comfort level. I have seen plenty of posts on hear from people with that problem, and it is not so easily fixed as normal bike shops cannot cope with a motor wheel.
I have never owned a Bosch powered bike, so cannot comment from personal owning experience.
I think anything you buy that has soft wear that makes it harder to fix works for the manufacturer not the individual. You pays your money and makes your choice.
I had to fix the battery and charger connections on my Yamaha charger and battery myself when they broke as the only option otherwise was to buy a new charger and battery.