i would have to confirm what bungle said. but i can now explain why.
i have recently seen a photo of the engine bay for an MG metro. they have exactly the same air box but the trunk is a round tube that goes down towards the grille.
now the cooper engine is basically the MG one so my guess is that rather than redesign the air box they simply added the trunk to suck air from the usual position above the gear box and yes, the trunk also has an amazing ability to reduce the induction noise to a minimum. why did they not just make a new air box. probably cost but eventually they did use a new style but only on the later non coopers.
i have experimented with all variations of this air box on my car (this is why i have to keep buying new ones). in my opinion you get a marginal increase in power at the very top of the rev range (5000-6000rpm) without the trunk but you also get a hell of a lot more noise.
personally i prefer the car quiet. there is no reason why you cant just take the trunk of and try it.
two options i haven't tried, 1. get a later style air box (open classics are one model that uses them) 2. remove the trunk and add ram pipe to the end that doesnt have such a sharp bend, in a similar way to the MG metro, but you need to invest in the right type of pipe
EDIT: OK, this is the only pic i can find of an MG metro set up at the moment but you can just see that it has the same air box but with a pipe instead of the trunk....
Edited by THE ANORAK, 21 June 2008 - 09:34 AM.