I dont have reception down here in the sticks anyway lol.
Boosted apps require diff setups, and frankly, a lot (i'd say 95%) of the fabricated manifolds for the states for popular boosted apps, are nowhere near optimal in design and would work terribly as a NASP app. However, boosted cars make power easier with smaller restriction reductions.
Their fantastic fabrication skills though do make them look great!
Angles throttle position isnt such an issue, and the blend into the plenum in those cases is close to what your looking for, however you'll never get away with that particular use of space.
I tend to find most of the issues, personally, with the runner designs, tapers, entries and volumes. Their plenum volumes are small because they are boosted, so I certainly wouldnt stick to the 1.5x rule by any means. When it comes to plenum sizing, unless you run A LOT of engine simulation software that is extremely accurate (you can spend a week just building the stock engine into software to check that it comes up with stock numbers first), then nothing beats experience and the black art of understanding what you are trying to deliver from a plenum.
Running one on a dyno and checking the results is one thing, but on road use and the effects on just how the powercurve is delivered at different throttle angles and rates of opening/closing are far more important considerations. On the dyno you can just end up with excessively large plenums chasing numbers.
Running round entries isnt a bad thing, you'll be fine without manipulating it, just dont sit the entries proud of the plenum base....I hate that. Also the taper and CSA change along the runner will affect things greatly, and this will be dictated by how much runner length you decide to/can fit in......choosing a random length can cause you to hit a nasty point in pressure wave position relative to valve position and generate a huge shift in the torque curve peak/trough.
The smaller the plenum, typically the greater the transient nature of the engine, although cylinder to cylinder interchange becomes more of an issue, and so does the tuning effects of the plenum.
Its tricky, but I guess you gotta start somewhere, then go to the next extreem to see how things swing around on your particular application when your learning.