I would note too that I have the Mountune airbox with a 3" bored bottom inlet/3" flange and larger ducting (2.75" neoprene from Summit Racing originally for brake ducts) going into the fender with the washer reservoir out, Whoosh 2.75" induction pipe from airbox to crossover, RAMAIR crossover pipe (2.75"), a 2.75" to 3" aluminum adapter to the 3" turbo inlet elbow. This definitely helped the car spool faster and provided better throttle response. The factory setup with a Mountune airbox has two feeds with the bottom at 2.5" I believe, the factory induction pipe necks to 2.5", the factory crossover goes from about 2.5" to almost 1.75" at the bottom, which goes to an adapter back up to the 3" for the turbo inlet. I was not happy with that, although its designed for plug in play, so i modified the airflow path to ensure it was 2.75" or more all the way with the parts noted. The Mountune airbox isnt a major restriction since it has two feeds already, despite the bottom being 2.5".
I never saw over 282 on the vdyno despite temps in the 40's and 50's until I made these changes, but that was fine since that was the target on 93, give or take a few hp. With the changes, I had one log at 305/308 and repeatable logs in the mid to high 290's, adjusted SAE for temps and barometric pressure by altitude for my location in the 40 degree temps. The car's tuning is designed to be safe though so no amount of airflow mods will change power much when load targets are hit according to the tune when its hotter, you'll just hit them easier. Basically buying more power when its cold and the tune/load targets will allow for it being higher due to the temps being cooler. I didnt ask Randy to push the tune higher in the temp adjustments as I wanted it very safe when its hot out.