Here you go, in this link go to the last post from Ewan, click on the trail calculator at the bottom of his post, when it opens up, go to where it says "offset" it is 45mm , double click on the 45mm, backspace it out and type in 30mm and hit enter , the trail goes from 90.93mm to 107.29mm, which is quite a large jump up in trail....
http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php?topic=138100.msg1559172#msg1559172
Don't worry, a lot of people think less offset = less trail, its the exact opposite...
First of all YES you are correct. If You use the 19" rim and toss the GSXR front end with the 30mm offset onto the bike you will increase trail by a large margin. I have no intentions of ever using such a behemoth of a rim on any of my bikes though.
The exact procedure you are describing with the use of this lovely excel program is describing all things being equal except for the GSXR fork swap. Same 19" rim and no other modifications which is why your numbers are drastically different stock 90.93mm to gsxr dummy swap(w/ 19"rim) of 107.29mm. You have to consider that I am changing more variables than what you are describing.
Measured in the real world the stock trail on my particular CB750 is ~94mm. This is stock 19" rim with whatever is left for tread on the tire, 60mm fork offset, 27 degree headstock rake angle, 63 degree caster angle.
All stock but swap the GSXR front end 30mm offset would give you a ~130mm trail. stupid unless you are building a chopper.
I am using a 17" rim, 30mm gsxr fork offset, 23 degree headstock rake angle, 67 degree caster angle (due to my back end being raised). This gives me a trail of about ~94.5mm. yes i've increased trail slightly but not to the extent that you are describing. My trail length is in a perfect area to create a well performing bike but that is still up for debate until I actually get to ride the bike.