Math is only paper theory. It helps you get an idea of what is possible in perfect settings.
On the same token, if you have the perfect air temp and wind at you back etc you can run better then you where originally thought to on paper.
From what I ve run so far, I think that a stock bike is pretty capable to run 11.20-30's without modifications. With after market mods, I believe 11.0's-10.90's is capable. The key to all of it is weight and skill.
I don't have the small weight like some of these guys ( 235 lbs with gear ). Watching NA grudge bikes run and seeing these guys crack 7.0-7.20's, you can see these guys weigh at the MOST 150 lbs. Most probably hoover around 130-140 lbs. They are tiny guys. Guys like Pee Wee running this bike back then had a 100 lb advantage over most of us. That right there is worth around .30's, maybe .40's. So take my best run of 11.29 , chop off .30 and you have 11.0 on my bike just in weight. Now take rider skill from Pee Wee and knock my 60 ft down to a 1.5x-1.60 and there is another .20 difference ( 1.80 my best 60 that day ) and figure for every .10 at the 60 ft mark is usually around a .15 at a 1/4 mile, thats another .30 off my time ( which is now at 11.0 ) and he just ran 10.70.
So I seriously think its do able for someone to run in the 10's on a stock bike, if you have an optimal running bike, light weight rider and the skill to produce.
Now this is all on paper, but we've see the video's of Pee Wee , Dale Walker etc produce 10 second runs on these bikes. I believe these bikes were also massage a bit from the factory as well. Because we all know how road tests are setup.
Having a pro rider like Rickey Gadsen produce a supposed 9.71 @ 146 mph on a ZX14 stock is phenominal. But how much does Ricky weigh? Around 150 lbs I heard. So again another light weight.
So Mike if you want to go faster without spending $1400, lose 30-40 lbs! That will be worth around a .10-.15 for free!
Todd