I don't have bias and it’s not at all because I’m a reseller…… I shared my experience with you because I've actually done the work you're doing right now. I told you exactly why it's not economic to use high voltage on a motorcycle with a small pack and low power. I bought my motor after looking at all the solutions out there and just ended up selling them to help guys like you, not to make money. I've got a full time job and It's more about helping people. Notice that I mentioned 2 other solutions before I mentioned the ones I sell..... thanks for assuming..... but I was just being nice.
The issue with higher voltage in these applications (yes, I’m actually an applications engineer and have been doing EV tech support, vehicle design, component selection and schematics for about 4 years now), is there's a point where it works out better cost wise, and unfortunately with these power levels high voltage costs more than it's lower voltage counterpart. With your car, it works out because the power levels are sufficient enough and FET’s just won’t cut it, and losses are too high. With high voltage, as you know, you need your components to be rated for higher voltage, you can no longer use FET's and things start to get more expensive, and the available controllers decreases exponentially (which I'm sure you've also found out). If you want high voltage, there's not a ton out there, and even though they are high voltage, they're also high power and much larger and heavy. Sevcon, Rinehart, Brusa, Azure Dynamics, all make inverters in the voltage levels you're looking for, but they're complete overkill and way more expensive than a lower voltage counterpart that matches your power requirements. Other than that, a low power, high voltage inverter for a motorcycle is going to be hard to come by unless you design it yourself, or pay someone to design you one. I've shared my solutions with you because you asked. Aside from you wanting "to go 300V (ish)", there's no reason that these solutions wouldn't meet (and exceed) your needs.
I'm an engineer and teacher first, sales comes last.