I would be happy with slightly wider gear steps. If Herr Rohloff had chosen 15% then the overall range by my calculation, would be over 600%.
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There's always a trade-off in whatever you design, whatever you buy. There was a time when the roadies complained that the 13.6% steps between gears on the Rohloff were
too large. Not having been a roadie, and having hated derailleur transmissions fervently for their malicious propensity to fold up every time I passed a bike shop, I just didn't see it. I valued the Rohloff for its sturdiness and ability to change gear at any time, even at standstill. When the time came to build an electric bike, that unbreakability became in my eyes the premier virtue of the Rohloff, even above Herr Rohloff's liberal warranty interpretation. (Think about it: if the thing doesn't break whatever you ask of it, you don't need a liberal warranty interpretation; it becomes a security blanket, nice to have and to mention to cyclists considering a Rohloff, but not essential.) It wouldn't surprise me at all if there were other sincerely held views within the universe of experienced Rohloff riders.
I looked into the Pinion* when it was new, and decided that a dedicated frame was too much of a risk for me: after all, I thrice changed the configuration of my favourite bike, the Utopia-velo Kranich, once to electrify it, replacing the generator hub with a front wheel motor, once more to fit a central motor. That the Kranich, 14 years old this year, has become my bike with the longest use and the most miles, is in a large measure due to the Rohloff, which works well with everything on the bike, and all its purposes. Believe me, regardless of what it cost, if the Rohloff proved unsatisfactory in any respect, I would have thrown it off right smartly, and recovered the cost with an article in an appropriate medium trashing it for cause.
* I was in fact favourably predisposed towards the Pinion because it was designed by Porsche and I have long experience with Porsche from the 356B through the 911 to the 928 (the last-named being the best grand tourer ever built). But that doesn't in my opinion justify a premium over the Rohloff until it is proven to last as long. Nor do I consider the extra gears much of a benefit: quite the opposite, they are just more complication and chances to go wrong and not endure as long as the Rohloff. The Rohloff is evidently extremely tough competition to overcome, so I'm not surprised that the Pinion, according to a report in this thread, has spotty availability. Maybe that bike-packing niche market World Tourer mentions will grow into a new fad like riding gravel, and save Pinion yet. Or it could turn into a fashion, a "bike-packer profile bike" requiring a Pinion to look like "the real thing". Don't sneer -- it is all grist to the mill; those of us on Big Apple and other fat tyres that don't cost the earth are the beneficiaries of the 29er fad a few years ago.