Fork Spreading Symmetry I have just begun the e-conversion on my second Brompton. To ease concerns and quash doubts about fork symmetry when spreading it using the spreader bolt method, I devised a way to check symmetry after the spread. ... My conclusion is that using a spreading bolt to widen the short steel forks on a Brompton a few centimetres (about 2cm in my case), you are unlikely to end up with major symmetry problems. And you can probably widen most longer steel forks (e.g. for 26-inch wheels) safely using this method. Richard
I'm the Jeremiah who warned everyone against this method, so I stand corrected.
I imagine what's happening in this case is that the steel in the critical spot is still in a softened condition from heating and bending (or slow-cooled after welding?). It's neither been quenched nor work-hardened.
When one leg bends first (as its bound to do) it work-hardens in the critical zone and the other leg becomes the weaker of the two. Up to a certain fairly small limit, dingrpdl has proved that the two legs will yield equally.
The good news is that the modified forks is stronger than it was before. Well, I say that, in a shunt you want the forks to bend, not the frame. But I don't think that's a major concern on a Brompton, or indeed on any cycle!
I was going to issue a word of caution, older Bromptons may have work-hardened in this region. The very good results obtained in this case by dingrpdl were achieved on a brand-new machine (judging by the pictures?) I think you'd get equally good results on a used machine, but can't be sure.
Similarly, longer forks need to bend less - the results should be equally good, but again one cannot be sure.
Oh, yeah, and my dig about such a modified cycle not being rideable hands-off was just that, a dig