
Yeah, an old hubmotor magnet woud stick to steel rebar imbedded in a concrete wall I bet.

That's a really really strong magnet!
My magnet test, using the rubber sheet magnets typical of a fridge magnet buisness card don't stick to the alloy forks at all. Only barely stick to steel.
See the reviews and testing sections for how I went about fitting a 1000 watt at 48v hub on alloy forks. The key item is the Ebikes-ca c washer, or similar washer that you grind yourself out of the typical torque washer in most kits, or make out of split washer type lock washers. The thing is, any tiny gaps behind the washer will put leverage on the dropouts, cracking them. Or the washer will slowly deform allowing the nut some space that reduces it's grab on the forks.( see the Fork tests thread from Justin too!) Once the nut gets loose, spinout happens. This applies to steel dropouts too, front or rear. In ALL cases the washers need to fit, and if not, be modified. You also have to look at the motor axle, too small a shoulder on it could spread dropouts. 9c motors have that, mine has inner washers to prevent it. Once you get good fitting washers, then a good set of tourque arms are the insurance. Two of em not only helps prevent spinout even if the nuts get loose, but more importantly, they keep the wheel on the bike if the bad thing happens. Forks are only a tool, no fun to pay for broken ones, but not breaking bones and teeth is worth the 50 bucks a pair of really good tourqe arms costs.
At this point though, I'd still be really uncomfortable running more than 48v 22 amps on alloy forks. But two good tourqe arms will keep the wheel on the bike if you put a 72v x5 motor up front. That much power, I'd want on the rear for other reasons anyway. I think 2000 watts on the front wheel would just grind up tires.