The Boyesen manifolds were used on 1000 and 1200CC motors. Do You need that much intake volume on smaller CC motors?? Probably not. Here's what I did a few years back...
To increase the velocity on my 2-SS865 motors with FS 48mm carbs (past tense), I epoxied the intake tracts full length with epoxy. The starting point of the "stock Boyesen manifold" was about 48mm, and my finished one is 44mm. The only other epoxy treatment I've seen on the Boyesen manifolds was some JB weld poured into the outside radius when the manifold was propped up for curing, reducing some volume and making a "short cut" into the reed cage entrance. I didn't like the looks of that and went in this direction instead. My batch of epoxy (west systems) had some aluminum powder as filler and was runny. I intentionally stirred it up to create bubbles that would later be cut into and roughened up after curing.
To create this "fill" I used even weights of modeling clay for each runner. The formed clay inside the runners is to mimic the final epoxy pour. I made the clay fill layer thicker on the outside radius more than the short side radius. Then cut some plexiglass to use as dams on each end of the runners, using 2 part blue soft silicone to fill the center void of the tract. After the silicone cured, the silicone plugs and clay was removed. (The silicone "plugs" were cast in place by using acorn nuts bolted to the plexiglass dams for centering repeatability on other manifolds). Drilled a fill hole in the top plate of plexiglass for filling, mixed up the epoxy and poured it in. The silicone plugs were removed through the more rectangular "reed cage" end. The final finish was a rough carbide burr opening up the surface layer of bubbles cured in the epoxy. Sorry, NO dyno testing to prove this lost HP...But it ran good with 0 hesitation or lag bog. One of these epoxied manifolds is on my Dasa 850 today.
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