I really wonder if there's any limitations for Nikon to use a Ring-type SWM in their fast prime lenses.
The only f/1.4 lens I can recall that uses a Ring-type SWM is the 50mm f/1.4G. The other extremely expensive f1.4 and most of the economical (but great) f1.8 lenses all use a compact SWM.
Nikon's 200mm f/2 uses a ring SWM, their prime telephoto lenses and zoom telephoto lenses all use this type of motor. Even cheap lenses such as the 70-300mm VR uses a ring SWM.
Ring SWMs are more powerful and they are capable to drive larger elements, however I do think they are also less precise, but of course a lot faster.
Compact SWMs aren't that cheap to make, it's not the "Chinese toy motor" that some cough people likes to claim it is. I think it allows finer adjustments, it is more precise but a lot slower and less powerful.
But here, we have Canon, using ring-type SWMs in some of their newer fast f1.4 prime lenses:
https://www.lensrentals.com/blog/2015/12/canon-35mm-f1-4-mk-ii-teardown/ All this is really confusing. Nikon did claim on their 105mm/1.4E page that, to paraphrase "the lens uses gearless swm", which obviously isn't true. I knew it after handling the 105mm. It's squeaky and not fast. Not that huge of a problem, but hey, this is bad PR. This combined with the heavily edited sample photos, and one portrait which the photographer failed to nail the focus on the eye.
I'm a big Nikon fanboy actually, but this riddle has been bothering me for some time now. There must be legitimate reasons for Nikon to not use a ring-type SWM in such lenses. The 105mm is expensive, justifiably so. Not a lot is saved by using a compact SWM.