...... just got back from a couple of days away which included an afternoon at Geoff's.
In a nut shell, the bike
was making 80.7 bhp and 71.01 ft/lb and it
now makes 105.6bhp and 81.78 ft/lb.
Worthy of note is that my fuelling was very very lean

My bike was way out of the optimum air / fuel ratio. This should be between 12.5 and 13.5 micro parts per oojimy wotsit thingy

confused

but was infact up in the twenties at lower revs and for the rest of the rev range around the 15's and 16's. So definitely running far far too lean.
I've blagged the gasmans images of his bhp and torque through the gear box (which are pretty similar to mine...)
If you look at the first graph, see the pointy profile in each 'tooth' .. ?
The bike is only making it's max torque and bhp at the end of the rev range in each gear .. just as you change up. Hence the 45 degree line through each gear.
Look at the second graph - the teeth have a flat top
and are much wider. The flat top shows that each gear is instantly making it's max bhp and torque, and the wider 'teeth' show that that spread of power and torque goes on for longer.
But that's all numbers and mathematics. How does it affect you on the road?
It's like the bike has been asthmatic, and now you've given it new lungs. The throttle is crisp and responsive. Little things like a blip between gears on a down shift, town work and filtering, trickling into a roundabout and driving out in third at low revs.
The throttle response and pick up is now just liquid nectar and a real joy to use. Remember the flat top graph through the gears - on the road that manifests itself as instant pick up and drive in a given gear - take the next gear and pin it ... instant crisp throttle response.
Money very well spent - a huge improvement on the original.
.............