Oh yeah, I am fairly sure the GS's don't have oversized ports. So you wouldn't gain any benifits from this treatment.
Are you sure? Ryan (Rosco15,
www.rccracing.com) posted some dyno charts for his drag bike that showed:
stock displacement - 1073cc, 113hp & 75ft*lb torque.
1166 kit, 128hp & 81.7ft*lb torque
If you do the math to check specific output (divide output by displacement), you will see:
1073cc - Specific HP = 113/1073 = 0.1053 HP/cc
Specific Torque = 75/1073 = 0.0699 ft*lb/cc
1166cc - Specific HP = 128/1166 = 0.1098 HP/cc
Specific Torque = 81.7/1166 = 0.0703 ft*lb/cc
The big bore motor makes 4% more HP (0.1098/0.1053) and 0.5% more torque (0.0703/0.0699) than the displacement increase will explain. If you subscribe to the theory that the ports were correctly sized in the first place, then the big bore motor would make LESS specific power because the ports would be too small for it. Given that the specific power went up, this would inidcate that the ports were too big for the stock displacement. Hmmm...
To those who think the stock ports CAN'T be too big, look at Motoman's flowbench testing. If you can add a bunch of material to the port and not lose any flow, than that port was too big. As he notes, the valve and seat are almost always the choke point for flow. Having a port that will flow more than the valve and seat will is a waste and lowers your intake velocities, which hurts charge mixing and combustion chamber turbulence.
John Britten developed the ports on his motor by mounting a valve and seat on his flowbench, then using modelling clay to build the port back to the intake flange location. Every time he lost flow, he would rework the port to get back to the valve flow number. I bet his ports were pretty small when he was done, and he had the fastest 4 stroke race bike in the world at one point.
For the people that think because you must enlarge a small block Chev port to make power that this applies to bikes as well, consider what you are comparing. The V-8 has a horribly convoluted intake path with a truly ugly intake plenum mounted on top. The bike (almost any bike) has individual throttle bodies or carbs for each cylinder, 4 valves per cylinder and a short, straight shot from the airbox to the combustion chamber. They are completely different creatures and what is applicable to one will not necessarily be to the other.
There, now I feel better.
Mark