There's another important point for anybody fitting their own motor to forks:
The axle is still 10mm wide, but the height is 12mm, plus the shape at the top is now not the same - arc instead of semi-circle. This means that the centre of the axle is now about 2mm down from where it was before so that the washers no longer fit in the dimple (lawyers lips). If you don't take remedial action, when you tighten the wheel-nuts, the washer exerts a huge sideways force on the lips, which prises the drop-out apart, and it can snap before you even turn the motor.
The remedial action is either to file the drop-out deeper to re-centralise the axle, or use eccentric washers that fit neatly in the dimple. You need to check and double check that nothing will exert pressure on those lips. The Ezee motor. MAC and most DD motors have 14mm axles so the effect is even worse, and to me are better fitted in a rear wheel unless you have a large strong area around the drop-outs. Zoom forks are good in this respect.
I would advise additional strengthening (torque arms) for any motor above 250w or running at more than 15 amps. Many torque arms that I've seen fitted are as good as useless because of incorrect understanding of where torque is being applied. The arm needs to directly resist the torque and not rely on the tightness of a 5mm screw. There's nothing wrong with the design of the ready-made torque arms, but you need to think about the way they're fitted.