I was actually pretty surprised at the throttle response from them, but you know everything with a carb made in the last 30 yrs has had CV carbs. I don't know how well you'll get off the line with them, but they can be had cheap and they will mount up much easier than most larger carb sets out there. They make the grade budget-wise because these can be had for cheap while CRs and Smoothbores are pretty pricey.
The reason CV carbs became the manufacturing standard for street bikes is because of rideability in partial throttle applications, they just make the bikes smoother all around. CV carbs adjust to the enviornment and they are regulated to the engine's needs via vacuum. Basically they adjust to their enviornment where as cable slide carbs the owner needs to make needle and jet changes and other manual adjustments.
In the 1980s one of the big complaints about the honda CV carbs was throttle response particularly with the cb750/900s. Basically the vacuum passages were too big and the slides were slow to respond. It was a back in the day upgrade to put 750 carbs on 900s to get the smaller passages so they would snap open when you mashed the throttle. By the 1990s the big four had them figured out.
Why they are not performance carbs is that you are always waiting for the slide to catch up to the engine's needs. You can whack that throttle open fast but the engine vacuum is what pulls the slide up and you have to wait for that to build, as compared to a cable slide where it is instanteous. You don't see a lot of dedicated drag bikes with CV carbs for this reason. If you run a properly setup set of cv carbs on the dyno against a properly set up set of CR kehins, the kehins will win out every time in overall power, but the curves will be smoother for the cv carbs throughout the rev range.
Your other carbs were probably incorrectly setup for your application, so to put these new ones on it must feel like a night and day performance gain. However because of the nature of cv carbs it is hard to tell if they are operating optimally or not. If I were you I would put the bike on a dyno and play with the carb settings (needle, jets, etc) at WOT to see if they are actually opening all the way. They are going to compensate for the engine's needs so really you are looking for how fast those slides go up and where the fuel mixture is when the slides hit the wide open position.