First question you should ask is, "define "very good"" - the conical hub is a drum brake made over fifty years ago; then, many of the vehicles around the bikes had the same* or similar drum brakes even on the front wheels of the vehicles; today, you will struggle to find any common vehicle with drums on the rear wheels, never mind on the fronts.
Second and third questions you should maybe ask yourself are, "Why have "longer levers" been available commercially for decades just for this BSA/Triumph front brake?" and "Why do I need "longer levers" on a "very good" brake?" ...
Then remember:-
. The conical hub was such a "very good" front brake, BSA/Triumph only fitted it for two model years, before swapping to front discs.
. Nevertheless, during just those two years, it earned epithets, "comical hub", "chronic hub", etc.
. Whoever at BSA/Triumph decided the same front brake would work on 250 singles and 750 triples weighing twice as much and producing three times the power was imho insane;e.g. contemporary Suzuki GT750 and GT550 were fitted with 4LS front drums ...
. Meriden started the 73 model year building around 500 650 twins; about two-thirds were fitted with the 'pre conical' 8" TLS drum in the conical forks, many at the specific request of the Australian Triumph importer that took the bikes.
. Emergency braking in the 21st century with a front disc brake, if you hit the object you were trying to avoid, you were going to hit the object braking with a conical hub. However, emergency braking in the 21st century with a front conical hub, if you hit the object you were trying to avoid, you do not get a re-run with a front disc to see if you would have missed the object ...
My long term experience of drum front brakes is limited to a T150 with the pre-conical. I do not use that bike for long-distance touring or two-up riding because the T160 with twin front discs simply has far better brakes. The T150's front pre-conical is ok when using the bike's performance away from busy traffic. However, a possible indication of how close the pre-conical is to its limit is, if I use the T150 for a classic track day, the front brake starts to fade about two-thirds of the way through a usually half hour session ... Afaik, no one has ever tried to say the conical front drum is better than the Triumph pre-conical TLS ...
*The BSA/Triumph conical hub brake is based on a design used earlier on British cars and small vans, there the design was praised for good (contemporary) performance and easy maintenance. However, they were made of steel and operated hydraulically. Otoh, BSA/Triumph decided to make their conical hubs in aluminium alloy and operate them with a cable that both pulled one shoe lever and pushed the other ... all good theoretical ideas individually but, having built them into one brake, afaict no one thought the brake should actually be tested in all intended fittings (e.g. 250 single and 750 triple) before committing to selling it to Joe Public ...![]()
I'm sure you're right about all of this - which is why I was leaning toward just putting together my DIY 11.5" front disc conversion discussed earlier. But then I get influenced in by the 'but it looks so cool!' and 'shouldn't I give it a chance?' impulses and I find myself waffling.
Reality is, I did have (and still vividly remember) the fact-based, gray hair-producing experiences with the TLS front brake on my '71 Yamaha XS1B--the Japanese clone of the bike I now own--which resemble your above experiences. I was riding in the mountains just east of San Diego, and they were good for a few hard pulls, thereafter fading into fright-inducing mush. I should just make up the nifty conversion I've already got the slides, axle, and hub to complete. And, heck, it'll look very tidy as well as performing far better.
But, man, that aluminum air scoop...
