It sounds to me like you're planning to pedal a very substantial weight around with you all day, and then in the evening when you're tired, run the motor up a last few hills. That's a fast way to get so fed up with the motor that you throw it off. Motor and battery together make up a lot of dead weight to haul around to use very briefly.
I've had two motors over a period of ten years or so, and if I'd started with your outlook I'd have chucked in cycling after a couple of months. First of all, none of the motors I know of are yet suitable for a tour of any distance or length of time; the required battery will be too large and too heavy.
I live in very hilly country and the single flat road in and out of town is lethal with too much traffic for its size, so I cycle on the hilly lanes, and the motor is switched on all the time though its input may be nil on the flat and the downhill. Then on any hill I may want an increasing amount of assistance, nothing at the bottom, more near the top than at the bottom, and this is if one is not trying to keep up speed but merely to get over the top of the hill. If you want to keep up speed, greater increase of power is required from the motor, which also has implications for the size and therefore weight of battery you have to carry.
Now, if this sounds to you like a UK-legal motor and software setup won't do it, you're right. A UK strictly legal pedelec (mark the word, it's a legal definition) is entire perverse to a commuting or touring cyclist's purposes, and ditto for a utility cyclist who may want more power when he's carrying a load of groceries. The pedelec is limited in power (this isn't as big a deal as it sounds -- it's the accompanying regulations that are perverse), so you'd think that you want to arrange the available power curve to place the power where it will do the cyclist most good. But apparently the legislators can't think. The law (or regulations formulated to the meet the EU's hostile law -- the effect is the same) requires a pedelec to apply power in strict proportion to the cyclist's input. But on a hill, or with a loaded bike, you want a greater proportion of input from the motor than you need in easy riding.
So pedelec software won't cut it even in the limited circumstances for which an electric pedelec is currently workable. For instance, you may discover a throttle, which lets you input more power when necessary, is outlawed either locally or nationally. In that case, unless you are old and so decrepit you ride only on the flat and without much load, the electrified bicycle is useless to you. Next consideration: many of these Chinese aftermarket electric systems (motor, battery, controls, software) let you switch between programmes for varying the input parameters and occasions on the fly, so that you get increasing assistance in proportion to your legs' input proving inadequate to the power required, exactly the opposite of the pedelec "assistance". Again, anything that gives you a choice beyond the perverse pedelec "assistance" is banned some places. A popular setup by 8FUN/Bafang can be made very tolerable even with the legal motor by considering the programmes built into the control set as nine further gears on top of a Rohloff's fourteen gears. That is, if you had the foresight to buy the kit from a dealer who gives you the software uncrippled -- many British dealers prissily consider themselves extensions of the police, and order the kit crippled by the factory or wholesalers, or cripple it themselves.
I don't know anything about the Pendix, but if it is aimed at keeping German OEM's within the German pedelec law, you either need a sympathetic builder who will deliver a liberated motor, or you want to buy a Bafang BB kit and controls from a supplier to British off-roaders.
If you decide to go ahead, before you start shopping, return here for an unavoidable mini-lecture on choosing your motor by its torque output, not its Watt rating, and scaling the accompanying battery by its coulombs -- it matters for the instantaneous delivery of usable power rather than pie-in-the-sky marketing BS. Also for links to the right dealers.
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You can apparently tour safely in Ireland with even an humongous motor. I met a fellow on the road who was riding a 750W electrified bike, who told me he asked the police, who told him that as long as he behaved on the road (he was bicycling because he lost his license for drunk driving, on which the police are very strict here) there was no limit on the size of his electric motor. But, lest you think I'm a maniac, I don't consider 750W or even 500W necessary for a cyclist. Even in my very hilly countryside, with my painting gear loaded, including a full-size wooden easel, 350W is adequate, given only that I have access to a throttle or the hidden programmes (neither of which are banned here, according to the fellow I met on the road) or both, and a very substantial battery so I don't burn out the motor when it chokes on being fed too few instantaneous "torques", to channel Jeremy Clarkson. Under the same load on the same lanes, with a battery scaled to save weight (!), I burned out a 250W motor in around 3500km, but I just applied the knowledge I gained and bought a bigger motor of the same make plus a suitably sized battery because I always considered the first setup a test to establish parameters.