GOOD GOD, MAN!
I'm starting to think you are a troll.
As has been told to you before in so many different ways in so many different times on this forum, and at the risk of oversimplifying to make a point:
MORE YOKE OFFSET = LESS TRAIL = QUICKER STEERING!!!
I.E. more offset is NOT more stable!!!
Dances - is this correct or is it wrong ? - And I have never crashed the Seeley, nor has anyone else ever crashed it. With the minimum yoke offset, it tightens it's line, - with the bigger yoke offset it become dangerous when braking. And I am not imagining it ! I cannot relate this difference in handling to the trail , because I did not measure it when I had the bigger offset yokes fitted.
"GOOD GOD, MAN!"
Dances - yes, this is correct with all the upper case and exclamation point.
"I'm starting to think you are a troll."
Dances - yes, this is correct. I believe in the OP's feelings here.
"As has been told to you before in so many different ways in so many different times on this forum, and at the risk of oversimplifying to make a point:"
Dances - yes, most certainly correct. I might say with a dollop of "ad nauseum"
"MORE YOKE OFFSET = LESS TRAIL = QUICKER STEERING!!!"
Dances - yes, correct, though this reminds me of the joke about how to make a fool impatient.............
"I.E. more offset is NOT more stable!!!"
Dances - yes, correct
Your experiences, in part, as stated above seems to support the facts stated by others so many times before though I don't fully understand what you mean by " with the bigger yoke offset it become dangerous when braking". When does this dangerous when braking occur: during straight line, during initiation and/or trail breaking a turn?
So your frame should not be twisted or distorted but have you checked wheel alignment, rake angle and other stuffto see if it is correctly fabricated?
As for your statement about "I cannot relate this difference in handling to the trail , because I did not measure it when I had the bigger offset yokes fitted"; now you have the information to relate the difference based on what everybody and their uncle has been telling you. See my note above about more track time and taking notes 0 very improtant.
You should be able to back calculate what the trail "was" if you know or recall the offset and hopefully you know what the trail "is" now. Please report back on this (what you find) as I for one am curious.
What you really need to do Alan is begin reading some texts on this subject; it is quite fundamental to motorcycle behavior. As stated before, Tony Foale has published some excellent work on the subject. Start with the fundamentals and work forward from there.