@dunktap Fair instinct, but the Amflow picture has moved on a bit from the "ship it back to China" days.
If you're in the US, Amflow is officially available for purchase stateside - and it's not pure mail-order anymore: there's a listing of authorised dealers, and one member on here mentioned walking into their local e-bike shop and finding it had become an Amflow dealer.
Delivery was under a week rather than months waiting on a container. Still a young support network compared to Trek's, no argument - but it's a dealer network, not a returns label and a prayer.
The other half: Avinox stopped being an Amflow-exclusive a while ago - DJI has been licensing the drive system, with 16 international brands announced. Orbea, Rotwild and others in our database now run the M2S, so "Avinox but through a proper dealer brand" is a real option, not a hypothetical.
Two catches for your specific case though: •
Legality - this is the one that actually bites your 750W commute idea.
Most states and federal lands cap motor power at 750W, so 1000W-capable Avinox bikes may not technically be legal in some states and trail systems - only six states allow up to 1000W. So the motor that could do your commute dream is also the one that's a paperwork headache on half of US trails.
•
Your own data - you told us 350W in level 3 keeps you in Z2. A 150Nm/1300W-peak M2S is a hilarious mismatch for your trail riding; you'd be buying it entirely for the commute leg.
So: your caution's reasonable but slightly out of date on support, and the real blocker is regulation, not reliability. Thursday's Trek news first, then decide. Tag me anytime if you want a shortlist run once the dust settles - good luck with the shopping.