.
But you can NOT do it independently from the rear wheel situation because you want to be able to use your perfectly centralised rear wheel at the front, too! That's what the idea of interchangeable wheels is all about after all.Well, yes, but I was rather ignoring the interchangeable wheel aspect as
a) riders tend to use use-specific tyres now (ie front or back fitment) rather than some sort of universal thing as was popular back in the hard-up 1940s. Probably a useful feature if the bike (and most likely, a side car) was your year-around transport, but not something anyone's really going to utilise now, I'd say, and
b) so many bikes after 60+ years have had incorrect replacement parts fitted; hubs, spacers, even complete wheels and forks may have been changed, so unless the builder is 100% sure that it's all as BSA made it, then it's better to start from scratch and treat each wheel individually, in my opinion.
Anyway, if you
know it's all correct, why not then just build two "front fork centralised" wheels? Wouldn't that be the most convenient way?
Mind you, I personally wouldn't do that....