The US Nighthawks were 700 cc due to tariffs in the 80's. That resulted in a different carb setup than everywhere else in the world where they were making 750 Nighthawks (and whatever they were called outside North America). I don't know why the carb spacing was different, but the carbs that everyone got from the 750 Nighthawks fit stock CB750 intake manifolds.(with a little persuasion) That's why I reference the Canadian Nighthawk carbs since they are the closest available to US buyers. I bought a set off Ebay.ca from a Canadian bike yard for about $125 shipped.
As Pops has reported on the Hondamatic forum, the stock Seca carbs that I recommended to him work fine for his 'matic with K manifolds. Since the 'matic head carb spacing is the same as the K head that the clutch bikes use, they just bolt up with a little lube and elbow grease.
Idle circuits tend to be a little rich on the above carbs. Main jets tend to be a couple sizes too small. A lot of the setup depends on the altitude that you live at. I'm east coast with density altitudes around 2,000 feet or less. If you live near Denver, the thinner air requires different settings. (DA's between 5,500 and 9,000')
The GSXR 36's have the wider/wrong spacing and they won't fit stock K intake manifolds. When you grind away manifold inside diameters to allow fitting bigger carbs, the strength that remains is reduced. That's where creativity comes into play... Adapters, bigger tubes, different manufacturer's intake manifolds, silicone tubing, etc.
Turbos are a different world. Dry or wet? I've never seen a pressurized box around carbs on a CB750. Everybody is using really old technology and crude manifolds to have a turbo suck through small old carbs. More horsepower gets a hotter motor which limits boost. Nobody has figured out intercoolers so the lower boost results aren't that spectacular. I'd really like to see a Nitrous vs turbo dyno graph comparison for a CB750. I suspect that they could be similar with the inherent motor limitations. Neither gets used too often on the street. Appearance is better with the turbo, but the performance might not be. The cost of the nitrous might be less for hardware but with refill costs it will end up more expensive over the bike's lifetime.
Just my opinions.
JW