Pre filter, not bothered. Post filter turbulence on a N/A engine helps especially of these age and no doubt not very well taken care of (despite being owned by enthusiast) engines. On a forced induction engine turbulent flow doesn't matter for obvious reasons and laminar flow is king. Flow is also tuned to the back pressure of the engine depending on inlet/exhaust valve stroke and opening times, so smoothing the airbox can lead to minor performance drops.
So please explain how porting and polishing doesn't make things worse?
Surely removing any steps/miss-matches etc will reduce turbulence and hence spoil things.
Funny...when I studied it, smooth, laminar flow = the most air in...and on an NA engine when you have only atmospheric pressure to get it into the cylinders, it's MORE important than on an FI engine.
The plenum has the affect on pulse tuning, with certain cam combinations. Never ever have I come across pulsing issues on a factory airbox set up.
It would be interesting to see a back to back test, but I would be surprised if there is anything more than a few fractions of difference.
I have tested two modified airboxes, and gained 1-2 BHP on an ABF.
That's is std airbox removed with the car strapped on the dyno, modified airbox fitted and th car re-run...same K&N filter each time.
1-2 BHP repeatable...sure, it's well within the tolerance of dyno accuracy...but repeatable...as in put the standard airbox back on and lose 1-2 BHP?
Odd, no?
The second test was on a Corrado VR6...similar results: 2-3 BHP, repeatable...car again not removed from the dyno, just the airbox swapped and re-tested.
Add these minor gains to small gains from ported TBs, K&N filter (or new OEM filter), re-chips etc...and you can pick up a few BHP.