Thanks for sharing, JR; an interesting read.
I've fitted two aftermarket electric motor kits, both to the same Utopia-velo Kranich, both motors from Bafang, the first one a front drive motor, which burned out its control electronics in around 3500km, the second one a bigger Bafang centre motor. I didn't reuse the battery from the first kit, opting for something near enough twice the capacity with the new motor, which is more powerful by 40% than the first one, which I though was a bit undersized for my size and the mass of the loads I sometimes carry.
Someone may ask why I bought a second Bafang motor after the first one failed. Saying the motor failed is shorthand, it was actually the control electronics that burned out, though there were signs of the nylon gears inside the front hub motor being under thermal stress. I had in fact bought the first motor and battery and controller kit to get the hang an electric bike, and decided in advance that it would be a sacrificial installation, an educational cost. So I thought it good value to get 3500km of all-steep-hills out of an underpowered but legal (in England, where I bought the kit) that I had calculated would suffer some level of thermal stress due to the character of the lanes I ride and lugging all my painting gear; in fact, it wasn't even all a write-off as I was left with a good 8Ah bottle battery, and the motor was still operational if I want to make or buy new electronics.
The replacement was a more powerful motor, which I calculated to possess the minimum torque required for the terrain and kind of use I put the bike to. I've been very satisfied with this installation, the proprietary software, and the large battery.
The need for a large battery arises because I use the electric motor as a fill-in, not an electric motorbike, controlling the motor by my heart-rate as reported by my iPhone on the handlebars, which means the motor is normally required near the top of a hill, and for several seconds or at most a few minutes of high current output. For this need I appropriated the unit Coulomb, which for electrified touring and utility bike purposes is the maximum current instantly available for a sustained but short term high-current delivery. Interestingly, the current BMW-built Rolls-Royce has no rev counter but instead a residual power meter, which meets my redefinition of the Coulomb. Also, if you have a power bar on the control facia for your motor, that too reports instantly available current, so it too meets my redefinition.