Dave, there is varying data in circulation regarding the OS stock venturi ID.
However, all that I bought from Tower—and there were quite a few—measured 6.55mm.
The OS factory spray bar is 3.5mm OD while the Enya part is 4mm.
There is more information and some charts that can be downloaded here—
http://www.flyinglines.org/dg.venturi.html
The stock venturi diameter is not a mystery, it is .257x" (nominally 6.55 mm), measured from a bunch of different ones with my split-ball gauge and micrometer. Any differences are manufacturing tolerances. I am not sure how there is a debate about it, it hasn't changed in almost 30 years (20/25FP, 25LA) and all that I have measured are the same.
I would note that it is not that easy to measure it to .001" using normal equipment. If you use calipers, for instance, you will get about .256+, just because the blades aren't sharp enough to be unaffected by the curvature of the surface. I use a Starrett split-ball hole gauge and a micrometer. Just not cleaning off the oil might be good for .0005 or so.
The stock spraybar is .137x" (nominally 3.5 mm). The equivalent venturi choke area using a 4mm/.157x" spraybar is about .272 (Letter I drill). This should get you very close on area. Whether it runs the same is open to experiment.
It doesn't matter too much if you are trying to experiment with it, but it matters a lot if you are trying to replicate the results without expert help. The stock system has long since passed the "experimental" stage, and most people would be best served by running it dead stock out of the box, because the unit-to-unit variation is negligible, and works better than almost anything anyone else is running no matter how much money is spent, and vastly better than most.
Given that many people attempting to use this system probably have never used or witnessed anything of equivalent run quality, it makes a lot of sense to me to first try to establish a baseline performance, then experiment later.
Brett