Kitika,
Have you been reading the other responses or do you already know the answer and you're just going to build it anyway?
It's not going to make a useful difference to your performance. It's just not. If it did, your car would just run lean and there's no fuelling adjustment in a sierra carby. The best you could expect is it to ice your carby on a cold day.
Modern high performance cars don't run "funnels" that I have seen, just ducts to areas that get cool air flowing through a bonnet gap or around a headlight. This has been the case for the last "high performance" caes I have owned - renaultsport Clio, Cooper s and STI WRX.
If you do the sums on pipe diameters and velocity @ a given CFM, you will find that the speeds the air reaches in the inlet are so far beyond road speed it a joke.
As an example, race cars are power limited by inlet restrictors. They work because the air at the restrictor approaches the speed of sound

as it passes the restrictor so the frictional losses become impossible to beat. Even in race cars at 300km/h, inlet velocities still defeat road speedm regardless of funnel type inlet setups.
In any case, any possible power advantage will be impossible to measure and maybe even defeated by the massive increase in drag you will be introducing by damming the air around the windscreen (which is a big factor in suzuki open road performance)
Steve.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]