Al-a-lot, The school boy math does not include the long spring coil bowing for friction inside of stanchions, though should not be that big a deal to consider in real use with shock vibes speeds over coming binding. RGM did not have progressive springs with higher rates available when I was shopping for Peel, so may solve over 200 lb pilots needs. I do know that if more mass behind the shock mounts than in front its too easy to pull up and hold a wheelie for dozens of yards on balance point. I should measure Peels springs installed in forks with straps, scale and big C-clamp. There are two camps on fork springs, one the elite pavement racer designers that claim a constant rate spring is best and progressive spring just used to cover up design set up faults and 2, the off road runners that mostly try to ride w/o loading fork much but slam down on it from bumps and jumps. If ya can only go as fast around as a road racer then stick with their wisdoms, but if rest of cycle so good forks don't get loaded much, as most of mass on rear from the straight or leaned acceleration, progressives work a treat for me, until no fork load at but for instants of most mass suddenly on and off them.
I've had my feet and hands on front sliders/axle [on modern and Roadholders] feeling EXACTLY what they do on and off road in various conditions, surface texture, power loads and lean angles plus cargo or not. What is being totally missed by road racing world is the forks expand, so the more forks can lengthen in a harsh turn the more front can stay in useful control contact. There is direct relation between rear and front loading, going slow or braking loads forks down and removes rear grip to slip but going faster or accelerating unloads forks to pile up mass on rear patch grip. When one gets near limits of cycle handling on the surface conditions its way more like off road riding needs than going to grocery store in town. For rough road riding its best to have more travel range with couple inches of low spring action to take up the annoyance textures but very hi final inch rate plus soft indefinite hydraulic stop and reversal to avoid hard upsetting fork bottoming slams. Throttle up just before a lump also helps forks handle it but scary method as next instant bike lands on forks and something my be in the way.
If we could find a source of springs of correct ID & OD but short enough with already flattened ends, then could just stack em up for better fork action over rough stuff as well as smooth flying surfaces.