We have done lots of testing for filter companies over the years and have seen little gains from induction kits
I have revo stage 1 and have had my (open) ITG fitted for a week now. You cant tell me there are are little gains to be had as I have noticed a big difference , especialy mid range.
Very little
peak power gains to be had.
Your running Bosch MED9 ecu which are load and torque based, the load and torque structure is based on MAF and MAP readings the ecu works out the power and cuts back. Put an induction kit on a stock TFSI and you will be lucky to see 1-2bhp on the peak numbers.
Start pushing the power to a point where the intake becomes restrictive, then you will be gains over a stock intake but no more power than the ecu will allow. The best way to fool the TFSI to make more power without mapping is reduce back pressure.
With your setup you could have gained an avg of 5-6lbft across the midrange or on the peak boost point, if your current oem intake was an isssue then the peak hp/flow high rpm gains would have been much greater.
The big peak power gains from induction kits are on NA engines, look at the R32 10bhp gain between 6400-6800rpm just from an induction kit, but nothing in the midrange.
I am running 2-3 cars every day 6 days a week on my dyno and have done for the last 4 years, I have see all the kits, oem intakes, diy kits ect and have a good picture in my head of what does what.
We had a carbonio induction on a stage2 1.8T k03s.... 208bhp customer said car
"felt and sounded quicker" when he fitted the £200+ induction kit, I could not map the car over 208bhp with over 6 hours on the dyno trying. Jim removed the Carbonio induction kit and fitted a OEM air box with pipercross filter and did a power run back to back the result was 18bhp on the peak power. Just did not sound as good in the midrange.
I am trying to help people save a little bit of money, a £35 Pipercross filter works fine on stage 1 TFSi tuning.