Bosch 750s on NCC70s are fine - if installed properly. We have used ours on 24v and then modified the NCC70s for 36v (actually made them switchable) This is explained on the 4QD site and is quite easy. Our gearing was poor (10 dia wheels and only a 9 to 50 reduction from the motor) which meant sluggish acceleration, high top speed and a BIG current draw from stationary. The NCC70s were fine.
The main thing to think about is mechanical support and heatsinking. I strongly suggest that you mount the big ally heatsink onto another big chunk of ally, ideally part of your chassis - and use heatsink compound between the faces - and thread locker on the fastners! Then make stand-offs to suit the 4 corner mounting points. These must fit properly without stressing the board. Thread lock them too. Final word of advice, fit the boards as close as you can to the centre of your bot - the inertial loads set up in the board when your bot is bashed by a super flipper or FBS are minimised. The loads are much, much worse if you mount the boards at the ends or edges of your bot. A sensible installation and you will be fine with NCC70s. Avoid DC111 mixers though - these are awful and there are many better and cheaper around - Delbots etc.
For series 7, we took off the Bosches - to save weight, we went to Iskras for drive, leaving 2 Bosches on NCC70s for the disks.

Richard
13 Black