According to my "Boxer from /5" history book, all twin shock R65s from 1978 - 1984 had:
Steering head angle: 63 degrees
Trail: 96mm
Stanchion/fork diameter 36mm
Wheelbase (1978-1980) 1390mm
Wheelbase (1981-1984) 1400mm
And, since you're dealing with an R100 (though I only have data for -> 1984 twin shock models, no mono/para-levers):
Steering head angle: 62 degrees
Trail: 88mm
Stanchion diameter: 36mm
Wheelbase: 1465 mm
Because of the shorter wheelbase of the R65, having a bit more trail helps with the stability - the head angles are pretty close to the R100, so you might not have too bad of a handling change, with the combination of the leading axle forks, your trail figures wont be too far off, though raising the fork tubes a wee bit may offset the few mms of difference. With the 1cm offset and leading axle and 1 degree angle difference, I expect that your wheelbase will "grow" a little. I don't know if all these slight tweaks would
seriously affect your handling, I'd expect that it may make the bike a bit slower handling, particularly at low speeds - but I've done extremely little in the way of modifying bike's steering geomtery and am only speculating.