Pddain,
As far as pop, no. Think of it like thunder clouds-cold meeting hot and pop/thunder.
The theory is, how do I slow down the speed of air out of a short pipe? Think of a bad set of valve guides being real loose. On the intake stroke, its vacuum is like electricity looking for the shortest way to fill that void back to 14.7 psi. So when you lift going down a long hill say, the car in front has lifted off the gas, then a whoosh of smoke comes out showing a big bellow of smoke and then clears up on sustained throttle.
It's still pulling oil out of that guide each intake stroke, but you don't see it. Add the short pipe, you pulled raw fuel out sort of faster. Let it sit where the blue starts out of the head, then on lift, it was being fired off as fresh air is being pulled in to refire the raw and that is being cooked blue is that raw heating up like the oil sitting there. Except it's gas sitting on lift, not oil. Think of it like that same-same going on.
The lolly/table/bolt... slows the pull of the raw out of the chamber. The raw is power, so you stopped the raw from leaving the chamber and torque is back as the raw fires, not the spent-gas that was mixed back in with the remaining raw and whatever fresh air that has less torque or the raw/fresh/spent making less power.
I'm more the lollypop type you see here. Why? Some hardware parts have the washer [type] welded to a threaded shaft. The washer has a hole already, but say we have a bolt across the pipe already, but a thin washer instead. That's going to slow the speed down out of the pipe as sitting open in the horizontal position.
You're limited with the table moving the up or down and that's more dyno work to see if a few threads and the table's reposition makes a difference. With the lolly, you have a lot more square to deaden the pulse, and can more lock it down in a lot more degree settings. The snuff is either open or closed is the old ad photo, but you get the idea with the hardware ready to go. And I'd move the hole in some so the washer is inside more, rather than the blade or the washer sticking out of the end.
I'd be at the point of taking a needle nose with me and making sure the nut is tight enough to move the washer at the 45° angle and start sending that move up the ass factor and see if you felt any change in torque?