The thing is, all figures have to be realistic. If you use the prefab provided airflow figures it will be off pretty bad. If you have had your heads ported and flowed, and have the flowsheet, you can input that in your program and it will be much more accurate, to the lower side usually. The flow figures for something like wedge head, stock ports, stock valves, will be pretty high flow numbers. Remember that most of these softwares are based on small block chevs as that is what most people fool with. The Dyno Sim program I think is the newest version of Dyno2000, as two companies merged, and the respective softwares were obsoleted as they made the new version. I also noticed that the price was significantly more for the newer software than what they used to sell.
At any rate, just be sure that you input as much real world data in to get the most accurate output. You can custom tailor airflow data for the heads, camshaft figures, and combustion chamber/cylinder volumes, so the closer you get to reality on these items, the closer your data will be when you output.
James Potter
`57 Fords International

`57 Custom Tudor
`57 Fords International National Director
Pass Christian, MS (near Gulfport/Biloxi)