Like has been said, below 36t starts to get impractical at low speeds.
You have to pedal up to 10mph just to start the motor but it does run along quiet.
I run a 44t and larger because I am 210 lbs and have huge steep hills the stock motor will not get up. I have that problem solved and I can do 40mph with the single speed. Here is the secret:
There are 4 ways to increase power to the ground:
1) reduce friction, about 5% possible
2) increase displacement, proportional increase but expensive
3) increase average cylinder pressure, 10%-30% typical
4) increase rpm. proportional (with some loses) but decreases reliability
So displacement is probably out because you have what you bought, and you can work on friction (tires, light lubes, teflon, better bearings, wind resistance, chain tension etc). So you are left with increasing the cylinder pressure and rpm, which will multiply each other's effect and can potentially double the effective HP.
Reshape the combustion chamber (read up on squish turbulence) to avoid detonation, widen the intake and exhaust port windows in the cylinder and get a tuned exhaust pipe ("expansion chamber") will raise the pressure and rpm.
When your rpm goes up, you can get more speed out of the same 44t sprocket. So by raising my rpm from 7500 to 10,000 I go from 30mph to 40mph and have the power to haul it. I also have the gearing to pull away from a stop and make it up the hills.
Often when you want something, you have to give up somewhere else.
Not always, if you are reasonable about what you ask for.
Steve