I am not sure myself as I have not built a ve of my own yet. I have installed a couple in some customers vehicle's and they were more budget builds than anything which a stock one was used on one and the other used th N1 kit with a slight port job that was just to clean up some of the casting marks. This was way before I knew as much as I do now about the N1 intake design, which since a big ve build is in my near future, I will not be using. I would have to do some testing and measuring of the stock units which I don't at this point. I would start with what is known to work on a mildly worked unit for n/a. I have only seen 1 person that has shown back to back dyno graphs of a decently made custom intake manifold with shorter runners which held very well in the upper rpm's. If you want those specs I believe that cory has a thread about his intake manifold that he either had made or made himself. This would all be theory still as I have not seen or done any dyno's of different runner lengths besides cory's and that has a different plenum so the specs of his would just be a starting point. In all reality, the dyno's should be done in a car with this plenum and changing runner lengths to see how it reacts. Cam choice will be crucial to match the powerband of the intake manifold so I would use the most common set of cams for the testing which would be the N1's at this point. With at least N1 cams or bigger and every engine will react differently but similar enought that a manifold with decent gains, but certainly not optimal for every engine, could be made for N/A that should hold the power higher and make a decent peak gain. I think that it should be designed for peak power around 82-8500 and try to hold the power to above 9k before it starts to fall off fast. This testing should be done on the manifold should be done before any mass production starts. Untill it is actually tested it is just a guess. Most people wouldn't throw up the money like that, even though it is cheap for an intake manifold, based on a guess without dyno proof. Even then if one person seems to not get the gains they were expecting, it will hit the forums and then the sales will slow consideribaly. I hope it all works out but there is a reason that real companies hire engineers and do research and devolopment. It costs money, since there are no manifolds to straight up copy for the VE, real world knowledge is required.