As I have said before in other threads, it's nearly always better to just carry more battery to extend range. A lot less weight of battery can extend range to 60-70 miles.
There are places where you ride into mountains or desert, and won't have a plug for a lot further than 70 miles because you rode 60 miles up a dead end road. But for crosscountry use, you more than likely will reach a plug by noon, be able to recharge, and ride more till your ass has giant blisters on it.
Solar charging could be an option too, if you are riding into the wild and setting up a base camp.
If you do want to run a generator, carry the smallest one possible. On the commercial market, the Honda EU 1000 is not a bad choice at 50 pounds or so. As quiet as they come for one thing. It puts out 12v, or 110v AC. A lipo charger won't run directly from the 12v, so a daisy chain of some kind is required. Gen 12v+ lead acid batt+ lipo charger is one route. Or gen+ 48v charger that runs on 110AC is another way.
Even if your charger only puts out 500w, it will be doing it continuously, while you will take a break from riding from time to time. So you can greatly extend your range by having a charger than puts in only half what you are drawing. Start with a bigger battery as well, so that between the extra battery size and the genset, you have 100 mile range or whatever.
Forget the big generator, for one thing, you won't easily find one that outputs 48v. A 3000w generator is easy to find, and still cheap if your go with a china brand. But they are just too big and heavy to drag around. The tiny ones are bad enough. So buy at least 50 miles of range in battery, and then haul a smaller generator. Don't be in a hurry, stop when you need to, and let the charger catch up. You will not have infinite range, but you will have range equal to what your ass can tolerate, even if you ride a recumbent with a lawn chair seat.
So, you want 200 miles a day? You've pedaled further than 60 before right? You know what 200 miles on a bike does to your ass?