I cant agree with that. I have 14 gr and the increase in performance was noticable. I have the 2010 model with lea7 variator 33hp engine. According to the spec, maximum torque is achived by this engine at 6500 RPM and thats exactly where the 14 gr rollers put the scooter at WOT.
There is no right or wrong answer, it depends "what the/your set goal is".
I have done many "on the road bench-mark tests", so -to-speak "real life tests", meaning certain stretches of roads, often with inclines were measured with time and speed. THIS is a very objective measurement, not a "theoretical" Dyno-chart, and also not a seat of the pants "feeling", where just a change in characteristics can trick the mind. This to explain where I come from with the following.
My roller/slider changes and measurements were done on two different displacement and different brand scooters (PS: my original "feeling" was also proven wrong...):
Performance-wise the heavier Dr. Pulley weights (same weight as OEM, or even 1-2 grams heavier) tend to not improve actual performance compared to OEM roller weights, rather drop rpm early; they can improve fuel efficiency. A higher top speed can be (under certain circumstances) achieved, but the measured acceleration 0-50 mph, 0-60, 0-70 was not better, most of the time worse than OEM.
The lighter Dr. Pulley's, "best rule of thumb choice" is IMO around 2-3 grams lighter, will knock off seconds in acceleration, and can also improve top speed, as at higher speeds it settles the engine at lower rpm. However, the fuel economy can suffer if driving the scooter a lot at lower speeds (city), because there in average higher rpm is used compared to the roller weights.
As I said above, "IT IS YOUR PERSONAL PREFERENCE", what is important to you, the individual. There are certain trade-offs or gains either way.