Just a little thread resurrection (great way to make my first post here, eh!), there's probably a good reason Kymco decided to put an insert into the airbox inlet. And I bet it wasn't noise or speed restriction, it was likely to get better low RPM response, cleaner burning and increased economy, especially when you consider the use-case of the Like 200i (and the Agility City "R16" 200i, which I own) in most of the world, where getting a fast start or accelerating a bit faster at low road speeds and RPM is more important than top end speed.
Quick cut and paste from the intertubes:
There are a lot of intricacies and tricks to intake systems. For instance, it is beneficial to have the intake air moving as fast as possible into the cylinders. This increases the turbulence and mixes the fuel with the air better.
One way to increase the air velocity is to use a smaller diameter intake runner. Since roughly the same volume of air enters the cylinder each cycle, if you pump that air through a smaller diameter pipe it will have to go faster.
The downside to using smaller diameter intake runners is that at high engine speeds when lots of air is going through the pipes, the restriction from the smaller diameter may inhibit airflow.
So for the large airflows at higher speeds it is better to have large diameter pipes.
Me, I tried it, I did get a bit longer legs, but where I currently live (Malta), most of my time is spent below 60KPH, filtering through traffic on tight streets and bouncing out ahead of cars at stoplights. So the wee bit of extra top speed wasn't worth the loss of lower RPM performance, especially when you consider that the max legal speed limit on the island is 80KPH and my Agility City 200i can exceed that well enough already.
It's probably a little more dramatic on my Agility, since it has 16" wheels which already reduce acceleration compared to the Like 200i.
Get me back in the good old USA, and my needs would likely change, higher speed limits, less congestion, no filtering outside of California, and a LOT more highway travel.
Then again, I'd probably be back on a full-size motorcycle there. This is my first 2-wheeled street vehicle under 750cc since I started riding in the late 70's, my last bike was a well-sorted Aprilia Tuono 1000 with over 10x the power at less than twice the weight. But a 130HP bike makes no sense at
all here, there's just no place to use even a fraction of that, not to mention $9.00/gallon fuel prices.