I like the looks of the cobras but had no idea they might hinder performance.
Oh boy, are you in for a shock! There is a
huge difference in power output and throttle response between the Cobras 4-into-4 system and the OEM or any slip-on like Supertrapps, F1, or Vance & Hines. OEM and the slip-ons of any brand have comparable levels of performance.That is to say, slip-ons don't add performance compared to the OEM double megaphone/resonator box. Remember that the prior owner may have done sone rejetting to the carburetors for the non-power output-friendly Cobras.
Put it this way: on a performance bike, why would you want to
reduce power? The only reason I can fathom is 'because they're
purty.' OK, I accept there are a few people who like the looks,
and are willing to forego stock levels of performance, but as for me, I'll take the stock level of performance and throttle response. Once you re-install the OEM megaphones, and have the bike returned to OEM jetting (or you can reduce the main jet from a Yamaha/Mikuni 152.5 to a 150 or a 147.5, and get better performance on nearly all cases) and take it for a ride, you'll find out what VBoost is all-about. Look for the red lamp on the tachometer panel to flicker briefly as you sweep through RPM's of VBoost, which is roughly 5750-redline.
That's what VBoost is all-about!
About doing the carbs, if you plan on owning the bike for years, and riding it, you're going to want to learn how to care for them on your own. If you're not mechanically-inclined, members here like
dannymax, CaptainKyle, and
Sean Morley will do a great job of rebuilding your carburetors so they work as-designed. However, contaminated fuel (debris, water, gas tank rust scale, deteriorated gas lines shedding bits of rubber, etc) will soon plug your pilot jets, and though some recommend the use of techniques such as the
shotgun (you can look it up using the search
function) I just yank the carbs, split them into two pairs, and remove the fuel bowls to access the jet blocks, where the #42
pilot jets and the #44
main bleed pipes are located. If you remove the jet block, order four of the #35
jet block gaskets. They frequently tear upon removal.
https://www.ronayers.com/oemparts/a/yam/500456a5f8700209bc79313a/carburetor
Before removing the carburetors, drain them individually into a container to see what is in the float bowls, to give you an ideal of what needs cleaning. My general rule of thumb is, 'if the carbs come-off, the fuel filter gets replaced.' A check of the appearance of the gas tank is always a good idea. Cleaning your carburetors and neglecting a rusty gas tank is going to result in plugged pilot jets, and soon.
I recently posted about using K&L carburetor parts as a less-expensive alternative to OEM. The parent company is a Japanese OEM supplier, and you can get a kit per carburetor which has the jet block gasket, float needle valve and seat, float bowl gasket, the enrichener gasket, and the O-rings used in the carbs. Buying those separately through the Yamaha dealer is more-expensive, significantly. Do a search for K&L on a post by me, and you can find the part # for the per-carburetor kit.