Its unnecessary. Same thing happens with Subaru people who want the most power for all the bragging rights.
And this is not hostile. I asked for data and got a simple "trust us". Engines are highly complex machines in constant feedback loops. Lack of control of variables invalidates any and all data. Yes, a dynomometer is nice tool to have, but they have high variability between runs and are a single tool to test changes. Sure, you can get match a mass flow rate by simply increasing velocity or decreasing pressure, but there is a point where the velocity drops too much and your mass flow drops. Same as adding too large an intercooler, the air slows too much. Given the displacement of the engine and the compression ratio or the turbine, it is significantly less than the unit in my Subaru both in flow rate and displacement. Exhaust energy could be greater due to higher limits of DI, but I don't know what they measured them at. I don't know what their inlet/ out pressure was, turbine rpm, or exhaust gas velocity. All these things affect the energy content, flow, and thus performance. And that's assuming the car doesn't correct itself. I suppose the best outlet would be a divergent nozzle design (think De Lavel nozzle) would separate the exhaust flow best, but this isn't formula one. Thus we're left with tubing. Without data this is mostly speculation but drawing upon my previous experience, there should not be a significant difference.
Maybe I'm too used to my controlled environments at work, but I'm not attacking them, I want to know what they did, what was measured, and what the results were. If its a simple 4hp peak delta, that's variability on a dyno (run your car 3 times and see what the results are. Then run it 10 days later). What else was changed, was it bolt on/off or did they tweak other parameters.), etc. This is no different than my cold spray research. We played with many different nozzle designs and some were better than others. We had a problem with the computer logic adjusting parameters to meet specific pressure and temperature sets before initiating the test, which some we could not align.
Im sorry if I came off as harsh. I'm an engineer at a stressful job. I want to know the tech and reason behind anything even if I'm proven wrong. I just want to be proven wrong correctly, not just " us vs. Him". Prove me wrong. I hate mis-information but until I have better evidence, I don't see cat vs. Catless having a significant enough difference. And if there is a measured difference, we can start to argue configurations, distances, materials, etc. Its a never ending cycle