Lets educate DAG
Numbers I'm using are for illustrative purposes only and not accurate
A drypipe will make the most power when built for the engine porting as it is stuffing more fresh mixture into the engine and has no water to dilute the kj per cc of mixture.
An engine with 200 Exh port duration and a wetpipe could rev higher vs an engine with 180 duration and drypipe.
High port engines can make power down low if fitted with a long/cold pipe. This is the reason that Tim doesn't recommend his pipe for DASA engines unless they are large cc, typically you would run a larger jet on DASA vs other lower port engines to compensate, but this means more water entering your engine.
The cc of your engine will contribute to determining pressure and heat in pipe, so a 701cc with the same porting as a 1000cc would typically need a smaller jet in a wetpipe. Carbs, reeds, etc will affect gas-flow too.
Ignition timing will affect heat in pipe, advancing timing at low revs cools the pipe so it acts as a longer pipe.
A difference in the size of an exh port(time-area) will also move where the powerband is on two same sized engines with the same exh port duration, so you can't rely on port timing to give the range of the powerband of a pipe on an engine.
There are a lot of variables that make a pipe/engine combo work, pipes should be sold with porting parameters. This is why I build my own pipes.