The idle cells, even on a stock-cam car, can be
easily corrupted by aftermarket exhaust cooling
the O2s. Particularly if you see a big positive
trim, and you see lazy / asymmetric O2 switching,
you may be dealing with mis-trimming more than
mis-reported airflow.
At decel you may be getting up against the min
injector pulse width limit setting, an easy thing
to determine from the logs (less simple, is what
the min PW to shoot fuel -really- is, for a given
injector, voltage and pressure).
A lot of people just dislike the MAF but it (and
the MAP sensor) are pretty well built instruments
at least until you whip out the die grinder and
mess the calibration up.
I have never felt the urge to get rid of the MAF,
although I did change it out for the bigger truck
piece along with a nice truck table. No worries.
But that's just my case, it -is- possible to get
bias errors with inlet tract airflow oddities and
you can see this by the plethora of GM tables, all
slightly different, used for the same Delphi piece
in different platforms.
A lot of folks seem to fixate on one thing and not
determine whether they are "fixing" the real actor
or just patching a symptom by roundabout means.
The tools do not replace diagnostic skills or an
understanding of the machine (which we all have
to acquire, however we can).