The inlet horn on top of the air filter box for 77-78 has a added restrictor fitted, which is not found on the F models using earlier carbs.
The effect of this is to make the carbs suck harder on the fuel jets to draw more fuel through their small orifices. The result is nearly ideal mixtures delivered for the engine, and low emissions out the tailpipes.
Remove the inlet restrictions and the jets deliver less fuel making the engine run very lean and hotter, an artifact of pod installation.
On the other side of the cylinder is the high pressure stock exhaust, which works to hold a bit of the last power cycles unburnt exhaust, to be burned on the next cycle. This slightly offsets the engine's fuel needs, allowing less fuel delivery requirements. The stock carbs are tuned to expect this.
Replace the exhaust with less pipe pressure, and the carbs then deliver too lean mixtures, as the carbs have no way of knowing about exhaust (or intake duct changes).
You can band aid the inlet restriction by taping off a bit of the pod filters (about half) to deepen the pressure in the carb throats and make the carbs deliver more fuel from existing metering jets.
All this assumes the carb internals are clean and otherwise unmolested from its as-new delivery date.
The real danger with intake and exhaust mods for this model, is running the stock carbs with the resulting now way too lean stock settings. This results in a very hot running engine, as the fuel does contribute to engine cooling and lean mixtures burn hotter (double whammy). The hotter engine gets meaner to oil temps, and cheap oil then breaks down, and stops doing proper lube of the engine. Usually the engine top end suffers early wear issues, and subsequent parts needs.
I have a 78 with worn exhaust valve guides, which is probably the very hottest part of the engine. I do not know the oil quality used before I got the bike. Suspect it wasn't top of the line with proper additives for MC use, though. Still runs well, but a pretty good mosquito fogger. On the plus side, the oil in the exhaust has preserved those well.
Cheers,