Ha! I was right. Helmholtz is nonsense on intakes.
The goal on intakes is to develop ram flow. Once your piston reaches Bottom Dead Center, the suction stops. So your goal is to make sure the flow in the intake manifold has enough momentum that the air keeps flowing, packing in extra fuel/air before the valve closes. This is what justifies long/thin runners over a larger pipe.
So as air flows, the momentum of the incoming air is m x V, mass x velocity. So if the intake manifold runner were the same diameter as the piston (and pretending for a second that there were no flow resistance in the valve - ignore that for the sake of the example), the flow in the intake manifold would have the same velocity as the piston going down. However if the pipe had half the cross sectional area, the air in the pipe would have to move twice as fast ... and if it had 1/4 the area, 4x, and so on. However there comes a point where (as I said above), drag through the pipe is a 4th order factor of diameter. So as you go smaller, the drag goes up. So there comes a point where the extra drag from a smaller pipe is less than the benefit of the extra velocity ... and therefore extra momentum in packing the piston with extra air. I'm going to have to ponder, and I'm not sure it is easy, to figure out where that crossover is, but it is the momentum that counts, and based on comments, it seems 1 round 2" pipe is not as good as a 2" pipe with a center divider.
That brings me to the second half of the revelation. Momentum does not work as well if there are flow restrictions. Going around a corner is a flow restriction. This is why down-draft carbs are not as good as side-draft. In side draft, you get a straight shot, so you can develop better straight line momentum of the gas. So when JBCollier told me the manifolds should not have too much 'swan necking', that was why. Bends in swan necks slow you down.
SO now I'm thinking four straight pipes with four single barrel motorcycle carbs. No bends. Gotta figure out how to size carbs, but a cycle of 800cc going at 12,000 RPM is the same as a 1,600cc at 6,000 RPM in flow rate. I have to think aabout pipe diameter though.