Hey, I've been working with 'Maybe Alright' and 'Hopefully Alright' for years.
'Probably Alright' is an aspiration, way out of my league.
Seriously, if you haven't removed the outer races, and you can tighten the knurled nut to the point where the movement of the yokes feels stiff, but smooth, things look okay. Back off the knurled nut a touch and you should get free movement, but with no play. I like to set it just a little bit 'heavy' i.e. just tight enough to stop the yokes flopping from side to side under their own weight. There'll be a proper torque figure, but when you're working with worn-in bearings it's usually just as good to do it by feel.
From memory the knurled nut should go on pretty much 'all the way' i.e. full thread on the stem. If you've got this you're good to go.
As regards any skew when it's all tightened up, the best check is always to bounce the forks and feel for stiction. There'll always be some, but you shouldn't have much more than 10-15mm difference in exposed stanchion whether you bounce the fork 'down then up' or 'up then down'. When you're at this stage, that's when you can also stick the front brake on and try and push the bike forward to check for play in the bearings - to see whether you've tightened that knurled nut up enough.
Hope this helps, you can probably guess this is just based on my own 'always-room-to-learn' way of doing things, I'll always defer to anyone who can quote the 'correct' way to do stuff.