Looking good, very worthwhile work.
Yeah, I'm really happy with it. I'm just the guy doing the research, sourcing the parts, and paying the bills. I was very lucky to get hooked up with a good machinist, and I also have a good relationship with a local shop that does a lot of electrical work - and I've done enough business with them that they know how f'n fussy I am and they invited me to spend some weekends in the shop to go through test-fitting and installing the swinger & shocks.
As for how worthwhile it is - I am a fervent believer that suspension improvements can change the whole character of a bike for the better, while money spent on engine upgrades tend to be incremental improvements at best.
It's funny, I often hear stuff like "I don't need a great suspension, I'm not a racer", but I contend that good suspension is at least as important on the street as it is on the track. I've ridden some gnarly tracks, but never one that was potholed like city streets in the frost belt. Also never been surprised by washboard pavement in a blind turn on the track.
As far as I'm concerned, hitting the brakes while turning on rough & dirty pavement taxes a motorcycle's suspension at least as much as anything most of us are likely to encounter on a track. When I upgraded my SV650 from cartridge emulators to good cartridge forks, I noticed the improvement more on the street than at the track.
The shocks and slightly decreased rake and trail transformed the bike. The less-flexy cartridge forks, stronger triples, fork brace, further reduction in trail, switch to handlebars, and massive brake upgrade should put it in a new league. Once all of the kinks are ironed out, my expectation is that it'll be one of the very best handling and braking CBX's on the street. Almost all of the USD-converted bikes I've seen are using transplanted triples from bikes with much less rake, and their smaller offset will yield a lot of trail. Also, I believe that the cornering traction gained by going to 17" wheels and modern radial rubber is offset by the significant loss of cornering clearance that comes with how much the smaller diameter tires and shorter forks lower the bike.
It's funny to say given how incredibly ostentatious even a stock CBX is, but I think that other than the oversized rotors, the suspension setup on this bike will make it something of a sleeper.