I recommend two updates per week of one comic/page each. This should allow you to keep a steady pace, keep regular output coming, and replenish any of your buffer that is depleted with every update.
If people can't handle that, they probably don't have the focus to follow a story anyway.
I understand if you really don't like to break up scene flow, but at the same time...it's something that won't matter much to people reading from the beginning who decide to follow the comic later. Due to the significant differences between comics printed in, say, a collected book and those published in webcomic format, audience expectations aren't typically (and indeed shouldn't be) the same.
And to be honest, it would be different if you were getting thousands of dollars coming in for every story you did. Sure, I could ramp up production for that and do an update every day, probably! I could get assistants and end up cranking out a dozen pages every couple of days. But that's not the case here. It's important to value your own time and, in turn, set the example for others to value creators' time. And speaking from experience: if you push yourself to produce, produce, produce to the limit of your capability for too long, you're going to end up likely either burning yourself out or injuring yourself. It may not happen today, it may not happen soon, but it will happen eventually. Care for yourself!