Over the last 9 months I've been here, I've come to the conclusion a wild six needs to be mild
and wild. Just cruisin', it has to run like a Rochest Qjet, really lean and with a high air speed. Something like a stock log In-liner, in fact. Then, under load, it needs to have a well distributed air/fiel mix, with all cylinders getting a hit of bubbly.
Weber DCOE's do this easily, they are supper adjustable, but are needing a cut off log with a custom or Lynx intake adaptor. And the have to fit the spring towers.
:idea: No. 1 is the "vaccum tertiary" triple 2100 or 2300 (not the split 4500's, unless you plan on 1300 hp normally aspirated

). These are likely to j-u-s-t fit if you are carefull with a tubing set of brace bars. The issue for me is making the jetting and linkages work. The vaccumm operation is a no brainer. The linkage is a lot more complex. But it has all the features we'd like...lean off the gas cruising, full bore on the gas.
:idea: No. 2 is the idea of running them all together. Just like a set of IDA's or IDF's. There is a constant air velocity if the carbs are turned in to mate up with the individual ports. The two center ports are not spaced the same, so it spoils a complete independant runner intke system, but I'm certain it can be made to work. The Holley is the pick, all ciruits are fully adjustable. What is the difference bewteen triple IDF 44 running 35 mm chokes and a set of 500 cfm Holleys ruuning 42.8 mm throttles and 35 mm chokes? It's all in the progressive jetting. I guess the Webers atomise better than Holleys, but there is complete adjustability at a fraction of the cost with them.
I'd say a full 200 hp engine may need six 49 jets to discharge the 1100 cc/sec needed.
Lots to think about!