I just saw this thread. From all my reading and experience is:
-vortec engines were a dry manifold from the factory. No air/fuel mixture is flowing thru the manifold. It is delivered right at the valves (multi-port injection). This provides the most power and eliminates cold weather issues.
-With a carb or with TBI having a waffle pattern or "speed bump" pattern is a good thing to have on the manifold plenum floor. This isn't as good for performance, but will help get the fuel that drops out of suspension and puddles back up into the air and delivered to a cylinder.
-Different engines will run different when it is cold due to vacuum. As pressure goes down temperature goes down.
-even after adding alumniseal it still used coolant (on the porous edelbrock manifold with coolant bypass). Not as much... but still. I dropped the radiator cap pressure down to 8? psi? Now doesn't use a drop. Not correct, but it was all I could do.
-I have a 1 minute drive and then it is all highway. When it was cold (lets say 20 and below) the intake manifold would not warm up on the highway. At almost 3,000 RPM it is sucking in a lot of cold air. This kept the manifold from getting warm (this was on the stock GM performance manifold with no coolant crossover). I could drive for 30 minutes and at the first stop it would run like crap.
Now if you could somehow get the exhaust crossover to work when it was cold, then shut it off once it warms up or in the summer that would be great...
I'm still saving up for a multi port injection.