Don't let the fat tires fool you, it'd suck on any real trail riding, especially if it had hills. It has a hub drive motor (on the rear wheel), so the electric motor is ONE SPEED, though the peddler has 5 or 6 speeds the motor has one. The huge advantage the mid drive motors have, besides keeping the bike much better balanced, is that the motor benefits from the standard derailleur system, using it's gears, so more torque in the lower gears, more speed in the higher. Hub drives can overheat on long climbs, when lugged down, a mid drive you can keep the revs up, electric motors love the higher rpms, and that is where they are most efficient. Hub drives are OK I guess for running around town, for even semi serious use, go mid drive.
My current stable, all mid drives. I have yet one more, a 20" folding fat bike, with a hub drive, that i am selling to some RV'r to ride around the KOA. I bought it before i got educated. The fat bike is the roughest local terrain, the center one has folding handle bars and pedals, and just barely fits in a compartment on my crane, handy for running around town doing errands and for getting lunch. The Montague is on the right. The fat bike is hands down the most fun off road, but also the least fun if on pavement. Exactly like big tires on a paved runway.
