The USD fork has two bushes mounted at a fixed length of about 250mm apart in the upper tube, the lower bush is at the bottom of the upper tube and is quite poorly supported, the upper bush is at least at about the same place as the lower triple clamp. Under brakes the upper alloy tube bends quite readily in the areas between the clamps and below the lower clamp. Quite often now USD forks are common it usual for the upper tube to be bent but the lowers to be fine! Go push your USD fork equipped bike up against a wall and at a fast idle give it a little clutch and observe, with just a small amount of load the forks deflect quite easily.
With conventional forks the lower bush is at the bottom of the upper tube and the upper bush is at the top of the lower tube (slider) As braking load is applied the bushes move further apart and the lower bush moves closer to the source of load (axle) both actions making a more rigid assembly.
As for the oil reservoir both forks hold their oil in the same place, at the bottom of the fork.
In a USD for the brake mounting is elaborate and heavy compared to the conventional forks requirement to have a couple of small brackets on the lower tube, and thus negatively impacts unsprung weight. the balance of the fork assy tubes, internals, oil weighs similar amounts, hence its usually just modern design / materials / manufacturing methods that give USD forks any weight advantage if any.
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