wingnut99 wrote: My thought was why isn't the leading edge bent to the correct profile to start with?
Indeed, why not?
Area 51 had a caution about vacuum bagging and I have another. I have not heard of anyone else having this problem but it will give you an idea of how critical this is. I scratch built so had to bend my own LE skins so decided to try the vacuum bag method. I had the skins water-jet cut but made a small mistake on my drawing and had the forward-most pilot holes 0.2" further forward than shown on the Sonex drawing. There was still plenty of room for riveting so no problem, but it meant that those holes were a little closer to the location of the bend. They formed a slight weak line and that is where the skin bent, so scratch $150 worth of material and $100 worth of water cutting. OK, my error caused the problem but it shows how close you are to producing scrap using this method.
If you go for the Tony Spicer method, one of the things I found was that a large wooden beam with the bending pipe attached is not stiff enough to bend the skin evenly. I got around this by "pre-bending" the tube/beam assembly to allow for the deflection. A friend who is building a Xenos, which has a smaller nose radius so smaller more flexible tube, made an arrangement to apply force to the middle of the tube/beam assembly as well as the ends. His end result was an almost perfect fit with almost no dimpling around the flush rivets. It really was worth the extra effort.
Peter