I'll try to address these valid questions.
Thanks for taking the trouble to do so.
You seem to have built a bike that suits you better than your Mercury did, nothing I or anyone else says should in any way take anything away from that. It's just chat! I swap bikes around fairly frequently, so it would be both stupid and hypocritical of me to to suggest I know what suits anyone else when I can't always work it out for myself!!
However, where we stray from opinion to detail, I am inclined to comment...
I therefore assume, without supporting data, that the maximum comfortable load (rider + baggage) capacity of the steel Elan is around 100kg and the Elan Ti is a bit less.
There's lots of evidence this assumption is wrong, frame weight, tube diameter and gauge, construction... Leaving that aside, Spa would simply be irresponsible to advertise a bike as an All-Rounder with touring and off-road capability, if it had a designed weight limit that many of their customers will exceed. The large differences in the Thorn brochure between configurations are sometimes confusing, though it doesn't surprise me the difference a fork will make, it is the weakest link.
I've done some weighing: My Elan Ti with full carbon forks weighs 12.9kg
That's a reasonable weight for a light touring bike, my Mercury is 1.1kg heavier, though it's a few sizes larger and that includes a rack. The last build of my Hewitt Cheviot was 12.5kg, though that wasn't the most practical build. I know someone with a Spa Ti Tourer that weighs under 13kg. These are the sort of weight differences I've been suggesting throughout this thread. There's lots of reasons you might prefer the Elan, there is something different about Ti and the lighter the rider the more noticeable that seems to be. I'm still of the
opinion that these sorts of weight differences are not a significant factor in themselves.
I would see the choice of tyre to be a bigger factor in rolling resistance than the difference between 650b and 700c.
Yes, tyre choice is without a doubt the biggest factor. However, all other things being equal, bigger wheels roll faster, while smaller wheels accelerate quicker. You must notice this with your Birdy, I do with my Airnimal, the difference between 700c and 650b obviously won't be as marked but it's always there.
In case you're wondering what I'll do with the Elan 725 frame, there's a winter project to build a bike with a 2 x 10 derailleur drivetrain
and see how it compares. I might decide it's a better option for the summer months than the Rohloff.
That would be interesting, making the comparison between gearing on the same bike. I have a friend with the same bike who, at some expense, got his down to less than 10kg (Without guards).