Terry, The flow problem is Dynamic, not Static. Yes it will flow off the clock on the flow meter, but an accelerating engine sucking on very massive nitro and oil through small tubes will find itself with too little or too much fuel at varying points in the acceleration curve. It takes some time to get your head wrapped around it, but once you do your boats performance will improve.
Picture this! Liquid flowing through a long tube at a slow speed will require a relatively low pressure or suction. In order to cause the liquid to move through the same line at a high speed will require more pressure or suction. You might say that the engine is spinning faster so it will suck more. That is true, but here it the problem. The fuel and the air flow rate do not necessarily increase in the same proportion as the engine speed, and therefore suction, increases. It is the relationship between the length and diameter of the air passage and the length and diameter of the fuel passage that must match in order for the air/fuel ratio to remain constant over the range of rpm. However, we do not necessarily want the same A/F ratio as the engine speed increases.There is a load dynamic that comes into play here too, and understanding this relationship between the fuel passages and the air passages will allow one to "tweak" the system to get the correct A/F ratio map for a particular set up. It's almost like computerized fuel injection without the computer once one understands how to Tweak it.
Anyway, back to the Nova 46 specifically! A big part of these above problems with the Nova 46 are related to heat build up as the laps continue. As Martin said, the engine needs time to come up to temp, but in the cases I am reading here the Temp is continuously raising without stabilizing. In this case the heat needs to be released. Water cooling may not be enough, so the heat needs to get out of the pipe. This means a bigger stinger bore, but as you noted Terry, this will cause the fuel pressure to drop. This is the reason for needing the bigger spraybar, fuel lines, fittings.
But remember, what I wrote above. Just bigger is not best. The Spraybar can be too big. That will cause the engine to come off the corner strong and the go rich half way down the straight. This is the problem that I think Jeff is encountering. The easy fix for him will be to bore out the stinger rather than make a SMALLER spraybar.
Likewise, if the spraybar is too small the engine will come off the corner strong and sag lean halfway down the straight.
Ok, now that I have shared some of my speed secrets it's time I put some of my new ones into practice!... Time to go set some new Nitro records!