Here is a systematic method I have come up with to find the appropriate gearing, assuming you have climbs that you need to do, you have a power meter and a minimum cadence requirement. I have to deal with short climbs as well as long climbs and I want to stay at least in the 40 rpm range. From my power meter, I know my power profile and what I can maintain for different times. I then look at the average grade of a climb, my weight + bike weight, which gives the corresponding speed, which gives the cadence given knowledge of the gear ratio and the tire size. The computations can be done using online power calculators and speed/cadence calculators. For example, I can maintain 250W for 5 minutes, at a body weight + bike weight of 82kg. So on an 8% grade, that's about 11.2kph at 250W, and 45 rpm in a 32x18 for a 2.2in 29" tire. So that gearing is appropriate for that terrain. However, my FTP is about 200W, and on a 10% grade, that gives 7.5kph at 200W, and only 40 rpm even on a 32x22. I would not want to do 40 rpm's hard for an hour, and a lower gear than 32x22 doesn't work elsewhere.
I live in Switzerland, and such long steep climbs are everywhere, which is why single speed mountain bikes don't exist here, as far as I can tell. Local bike shops have confirmed that they don't know of any, due to long steep climbs.
To get to trails, I need to do about 200m of climbing, consisting of repeated short steep grades, which in single speed, I have to do above threshold. So single speed rides for me are VO2 Max workouts. Since it has been shown that those should be limited to at most twice a week, I can't do these rides all the time.
I live in Switzerland, and such long steep climbs are everywhere, which is why single speed mountain bikes don't exist here, as far as I can tell. Local bike shops have confirmed that they don't know of any, due to long steep climbs.
To get to trails, I need to do about 200m of climbing, consisting of repeated short steep grades, which in single speed, I have to do above threshold. So single speed rides for me are VO2 Max workouts. Since it has been shown that those should be limited to at most twice a week, I can't do these rides all the time.