@macamiga, I wish I could help, but I'm still not getting much traction here. I'm still on the fence, but rapidly approaching the point of going with Plan B: keep the NUC as a Linux machine.
I'm a long-time Mac user and thought I'd stick with the platform forever. But things have changed at Apple since Jobs' death—just like they dipped when he "left" the first time. It almost seems as though they've left MacOS behind in favor of iPhones, which is all I hear about anymore. That, and the latest wave of new-and-improved smiling poo emojis. When an actual laptop or desktop computer is upgraded, it is ridiculously over-priced (like never before), has underwhelming specs, and Louis Rossmann's videos have helped me see how very shoddy the build quality is. That's how I got around to trying Hackintoshing.
Apple hardware has generally been very problem-free for me, but I'm not blind to all the reports I've seen of other users having problems. Then when I saw the "stagelighting" problem on the latest MacBooks in one of Rossmann's videos, it rang a bell—I had a first gen Titanium die just like that. So, obviously Apple isn't learning from some very old mistakes.
Linux has improved so much over the years that I'd now recommend some distros to even the least propellerheaded of my friends. I'd lose a few apps by jumping platforms, but I've been finding replacements—as well as pleasant surprises like discovering that the scan software (Hamrick's VueScan) and "lifetime" serial number I've been using for over a decade now works on Linux. Lots of my favorite apps are already FOSS, and some companies (like Blackmagic Design) are catering to Linux.
I may beat my head on this Hackintosh thing for a while longer, but if I wanted to flush away all my hours tinkering with the computer, rather than getting work done with it, I'd use Windows.