I built one in the '70s after Petty announced them and then took months to actually produce units for sale. I liked the magazine test results and wanted one but couldn't get one. Also since they were pretty much bike specific they were almost like custom units. I used mine for Enduro/Trail riding on my custom Honda XL350/403 bike and liked it. Really great for BIG downhills where everyone else was off their bike and "bulldogging" their bikes down the mountains and I could just clamp on the front brake and ride it down with full suspension travel available and no tucked in compressed front end threatening to toss me over the bars!!
Here is an old picture from the mid '70s of my Honda with the homebuilt anti-dive front end. I improved on the Petty design by stepping the upper collar around the fork tube. That put the forces directly in line with the lower fork clamp and not in shear like the Petty design. Also lucked out and found a lightweight throttle rod off of a Huey Cobra Gunship that was just the right length and sitting around our Supply Room. It had been mis-ordered and no one claimed to have a use for it! HA!HA!
The conversion that I did on the front hub was reversible and I mounted an aluminum block between the lower arm and the hub with two countersunk screws. Simple to remove the screws and the hub would still fit to the fork leg for normal brakes. In the late '70s I built a custom double leading brake backing plate that worked with the Anti-Dive conversion.
The major complaints that I read about were that the "Pro" Factory riders did not like that the front end did not "tuck in" in tight turns and thus slowed the steering down. Riding Enduros and woods this wasn't a problem for me and I really liked using it. I only took it off when I went to 12" of front wheel travel and that wasn't good for the arc travel of the lower arm. I am converting back to about 11" of travel now and may think about re-fitting the system to the new inverted 21"KTM 85sx front end.
Swiss