yes, one would definitely want to avoid extreme peaks and valleys, however, frontloading is even used in traditional medicine with drugs such as anti-biotics to get blood concentrations up as fast as possible so as to avoid a slow ramp-up of blood concentrations. this is in fact what my goal was, to spike blood concentrations up, avoiding the relatively slow ramp-up, and then keep it up for the duration.
so i guess the question is are blood contrations the same after the first 24 hours as they are after the first two weeks. if they are then there is no need, but i tend to doubt that despite it having a short half-life.
does a short half-life necessarily mean it will get blood concentrations peaked to the desired, or ultimate levels after the first administration? I don't think so. it only describes, as far as i know, the time at which that substance will reach it's peak potency, having nothing to do with the volume, and therefore concentration in which it's placed. consider if you put 100mg of tren in 5 quarts of blood, and also 55 quarts of blood, the half-life wouldn't change for either, however, the concentration, and time to reach the desired concentration would be greatly affected. which would mean that it takes time for blood levels to rise to peak values for that dose, independant of substance half-life and frontloading should shorten that time.
at least that's how i see it.