As you saw in the Youtube vids, I cut a 2:01 for my best lap (recorded anyways) on the RVF. What you didn't see was the 1:56 I lapped on my CBR954, recorded on my personal camera attached to the tank. Unfortunately after that 1:56, just before the finish line I forgot my camera impedes my racer's tuck and It slammed my helmet into my camera, ruining the rest of the recording- it was pointed straight at the guages

. Thankfully the camera still works, but I really wished I had a better recording of the rest of the session because I am sure the lap times were 2-3 seconds better.
here's what I learned after watching all of the videos of the track day;
RVF: I didn't play on the handling strengths of the RVF, since I was slowing down waaaay too much setting up for the turns. I was down shifting twice for some corners when I should have been easing off the gas and then rolling on through after the apex-
CARRYING MORE SPEED OUT. It was weird how corners other riders were afraid of I was going in deep and passing on the out side, trusting the handling of the RVF, but had problems stated above in other corners. Another mistake was waiting for my knee to touch down- every time my knee touched down I could have been going lots faster because when I went to straighten up the bike didn't even get to the middle of the track.
CBR954RR: In the mild state of suspension tune, I did OK, but I could have done a lot better. Again I down shifted too much setting up for corners, and it showed on the video like I was in slow motion. What I did do right was trail brake well in the slow corners (11, 2+3), closing the gap on 90% of the riders in front of me going into those turns. I was braking so hard in a few corners that you could hear the rear howl (slide) in the initial grab.
Overall I did OK, I never had a problem with either bike getting squirelly, so I wasn't upsetting them with sloppy riding techniques, and I know where to go just before my next track day- back to the video's!