Tobers said:If the bolts are loose, the fork legs are not gripped tightly by the fork brace (yoke).
This can result in the forg legs rotating in the brace, resulting in the loss of alignment of the front wheel i.e. the front wheel can wobble sideways as it isn't rigidly gripped due to the foks legs being loose.
Riding with a front wheel wobbling from side to side = likely crash.
Take the front wheel of a bicycle and hold the two spindle ends allowing your straight arms to be the forks. Get someone to spin the wheel and then turn your arms as though they were forks. You'll feel the forces of precession (I think that is what it's called - one of Newton's Laws - the turning force of your arms is translated by the gyroscopic effect of the spinning wheel and manifests iteself through a turn at an angle of 90 degrees beyond your arms. This is why a bike countersteers.). If you imagine these forces happening on a much heavier motorcycle tyre at much higher speeds, you can appreciate why the forks need to be well braced. Actually feeling these forces makes the concept easier to fathom.
Someone please correct me if I'm talking out of my proverbial - I'm not an expert: someone showed it to me once on an advanced riding course to demonstrate countersteering, but I always felt it showed how important a strong set of forks is too. Or maybe I just have weedy arms!
Cheers,
Psyko


?