I doubt famous would be a word I use. More Notorious, Nefarious, or self promoting oriffi.
Whatever, if you use the XCTASY or xctasy wildcard in your Google or FordSix search engine, it will most likely show you all sorts of weird stuff.
I'm an engineer so I ask engineering related questions, and post engineering related responses.
The Stock Factory 4-1/4" EOBE 9430 KE iron header on 250 engines for 1980, and 200 sixes from 1980-1983 had for some time an available EO approved primary light off catalyst, with a giant 4-1/8 inch hole necked down by a stainless plate and a common other converter TIG welded in. There was a an approved number for it.
If , um, "converting" a big 4-1/4" header to a 2-1/4 down pipe, just as Bubba says, try and be smooth in your 4 bolt plate to two lug transition.
The lion's share of the 4 plus inches is not used for port flow, it's there to allow a fine 200 micron mesh coated with a catalyst to operate as an oxidation catalyst.
IIRC, the OEM Primary Light off cat does not have noble metals of platinum and palladium, nor is it rhodium. It's another kind which is why the cross sectional area is so huge.
The guaze type catalyst is very inefficient, so Ford decided to increase the diameter of the exhaust manifold so the catalyst wouldn't reduced horsepower.
The small performance boost in Emissions engines from this was 6 HP, as the log intake runner is no longer heated by a thermatic flap like earlier versions.