Interesting thread, how did i miss it??
I just jump in and make meself at home
Seriously though i think one thing that not really bin mentioned and is mega important is Volumetric Efficiency (Ve) of the SC.
Yes the MP62 does move 62 cubic inch of air each revolution, but only when Ve is at 100%.
Any restrictions to the inlet will reduce Ve.
Likewise the more boost you make the more resistance the SC is working against so the less Ve.
Take a look at this roots efficiency map:
The column up the left is the pressure ratio, which is the ratio of the air pressure pre and after blower.
No boost is 1.0 as intake pressure equals outlet pressure.
The bottom row is blower speed, basically the smaller the blower the more you spin it for the same boost level.
So a M45 would be more over to the left than say a MP62.
As you can see the higher the boost levels the less efficient the SC gets, this makes sense as your blowing into more resistance and fighting against heat and mechanical losses.
Now you you reduce you boost pressures but still keep your blower speed your SC will be working a lot more efficiently.
As the lower air pressure also means everything is cooler it also helps your engine a lot better as well.
Now for most of us MP62 powered mere mortals, we are not really spinning our SC's to within a inch of their lifes, so the gains to be made by reducing our intake restrictions to the point of dropping say 2 psi will not be much.
But the higher the boost levels the more gains we see.
What that means in real world power i don't know, but i'd hazard a guess that if you were at 15psi and you improved your intake flow enough to drop 3 psi, i'd bet you'd see 10 - 20bhp.
On a M45 you have the problem that your not really moving enough air to the get to the higher boost levels, but again i'd say a 2-3 psi drop due to a better flowing intake would have noticable results.
All guess work really i'll be the first to admit, but if you've taken it as far as you can go like Rockdoc for example it's gotta be worth a shot
Cheers
Mark