I just bought a '74 CB550. It originally had two large pod filters on the inside carbs and two velocity stack filters on the outside.
Disagree. It originally had an air plenum filter box and well engineered ducting to provide laminar flow characteristics to the carb throat.
The carbs were tuned for the carb throat pressures this well engineered induction system provided.
Are these carbs sensitive to different air filters?
Yep. Change the carb's throat pressures and there is no automatic compensation device to perform fuel metering adjustments. The turbulence introduced makes it unpredictable for certain rpm bands to mix the proper A/F ratio.
Are there any recommendations for after market filters that work good on this bike?
You mean filters that have man years of development time put into them for your specific bike? No.
I've also seen the attractive formulas for jet changes. B.S. in my opinion.
Not all "Pods" work the same. "PODs" is a general style. Not in any way a specification for restriction, flow, or turbulence introduction. Suppliers won't even tell you how it differs from OEM.
Not all 4 into 1s work the same. Again it's a general style. Not in any way a specification for restriction, flow, or reverse pulse timing.
If you want a reasonable prediction of jet changes associated with a part change, the supplier of the filter or exhaust would provide recommended jet changes to make their product perform.
Most of the suppliers use a fence model of sales. You throw money over the fence, and they throw product over the fence back to you. Meeting your performance expectations is your problem, not theirs.
There is even no assurance, expectation, or guarantee an individual product functions the same, sample to sample, with a supplier product offering. They reserve the right to change the product at any time, even though it may look the same.
How can a formula possibly have a finite outcome when all the elements of the formula are variables?
Want to use "PODs" anyway. Invest in Dyno time.
Or, learn to read spark plug deposits after each run on a test track, and have a supply of jets to test and try. Either way, you'll find out how cheap your particular pods are (not).
Cheap, quick, good. Choose only 2 for a solution.
Cheers,