I'm responsible for the 24mm thread.
When I first came to work with Odyssey and we started on forks, I wanted a big enough top bolt to run a front brake cable with the housing and be able to withdraw it without messing with the brake too much. But I also wanted to remove the heat and stress concentration of a welded insert. So that led me to looking at threading the steerer directly and using a big hollow aluminium bolt.
M25 was the nearest off the shelf size, but in a 28.6mm steerer that left a wall thickness of just 1.8mm and WITH the added stress raisers of all the thread tips. So instead I drew up the steerer as a multi-butted tube with a "thick bit" where the bolt goes and to use a 24mm (non standard) thread. This leaves 2.3mm wall thickness whilst keeping the weight reasonable.
I also added a longer "fat" section at another critical area just above the bottom headset seat where there is a lot of stress.
Our competitors obviously looked at these forks and took them to Cyclogic and CWI and said something along the lines of "copy this". But butting the steerer is expensive and difficult, commissioning a 24mm custom tap is more money and more work than just picking up a 25mm off the shelf and so they came up with the brilliant plan of just using a plain bore and shoving the tap in... OK so its massively weaker but it "looks" the same and who REALLY gives a shit right?!?
So now, our forks are one of the more expensive options, but mysteriously everyone else's lifetime warranties have had to be scaled back and have lots of caveats attached... wonder why that might be...
We aim to make the best, strongest, safest forks we can. We work damn hard at it and go to the added expense of having an actual engineer (me) design them, doing proper testing and not cutting corners. Because snapping forks isnt just "annoying" and might leave you with a warranty claim that doesn't get honored... its fucking horrible.
G.