Glad to hear the experience with the rear wheel covers.
The stability of a bicycle in cross winds depends on the centre of pressure being behind the steering axis, so a rear wheel cover clearly meets that test, it would move the centre of pressure further back.
I have more curiosity on the front wheel cover. For steering to be neutral in a cross wind, the fork offset should be zero, so the centre of pressure of the front wheel is right on the steering axis. One can happily build and ride such a fork, it will have a lot of trail. The Silvio fork offset is about 1". A side wind will steer the bike away from the wind, causing it to lean into the wind. Those who rode motorcycles with bikini fairings mounted to the handlebars will recall this feeling. Other 700c forks are close to 2", so side winds on those bikes will have twice the leverage to turn the wheel.
The wind generated turning force on the fork has to be resisted by the rider. On a time trial bike, the riders arms are positioned very arkwardly for providing this resistance and control, on a road bike it is not much better. On the Silvio, the whole inertia of the rider's body lends stability to the front wheel. It is interesting to note some Silvio riders confident with the front fairing in windy conditions (myself included), while the centre of pressure of the fairing is at least 12" in front of the steering axis.
This is just another case where the usual bicycle rules of thumb have to be thought through from the beginning for the FWD and for the Silvio. If the tour used Silvio's for the time trial stages, they would have dual disk wheel is my guess, and probably for all stages.