Have been trying to make best decision on air filtration/induction for a new build of a 550. I pulled out the airbox/plenum and marveled at all the free real estate I had now where I could do things like bring the electrics inboard, put in an oil cooler or tank etc.
I am glad I held onto that airbox, though. My gut sense is that this crappy looking piece of plastic has an extraordinary amount of engineering in it, and a power drop by replacing it with filtered, screened or even unscreened velocity stacks is likely.
Putting the whole issue of filtration and top-end longevity aside for a moment, pretend it is not an issue (it is, but the consequences of choices is already well-known)
What I am most curious about iis the effect that air temperature at the intake opening (wherever it is) has on power, and how much. Fortunately there are a number of science articles online, I've been scanning them since I woke up.
One summarized exactly the sort of equation I am looking for: "every 5 degree rise in temperature will result in a 1 percent drop in power in internal combustion engines". Other articles may hypothesize a different equation, but this one seems sensible enough to use as a starting point.
A velocity stack will be drawing from turbulent, preheated air directly behind it. The airbox with the intact side snorkel will be drawing from air that is probably as close to ambient temp as you could get.
My guess is that the temperature difference is more than enough to justify keeping the airbox/snorkel. If ambient temp is 70, and temp right behind a stack intake (with or without pod filters is 100, that 30 degree rise in intake temp equates to 6 percent power drop, or about 2 hp.
Setting aside that method of computation, I believe there would be value in knowing the temperature difference at these two points, as measured by real people on real bikes.
It's one of the few things that we could establish as near-certainty, with nothing needed but, say, 5 or ten guys going for a ride with two cookie thermometers. Anybody out there curious to know?
Other researchers may have