Wally 32C is only 89 F. No big deal. We are at 95 F (95% RH) in dallas today (about 35C)...and its actually still cool here. 89 F should not be a big deal.
But, if you have cut a forward side inlet into the engine compartment(unheated by exhaust)...and have your seals off, you would have a very cool compartment and probably negate the need for the actual foam seal as your fabricated forward duct would probably pump air through from the front and out the missing seal area. You now have plenty of cool air for your carbs. Also having your original hood ducting/bellow in place......gets rid of "most" potential issues as your cooling system then draws air from above.
In my climate...your engine compartment would be filthy in a week. Also...as noted this problem is different in different areas in in different driving conditions. In Dallas by August.....and this goes for most of the southern.western and southwestern states......the ambient air temp will be 100-105 F average or worse (37.7 C to 40 C). The air temps above the black top and concrete streets ....I have personnally measured in Dallas...range to 150F+. The air temp right above the streets sitting in traffic is commonly 115 to 125F. Any air coming up through missing seals by the exhaust is even hotter.
Whenever I drove in the summer in Oklahoma city, Dallas or Atlanta...without a proper seal...which has happened before as they used to be hard to get......everything inside of the engine compartment was very hot...well over 225 F. Burn yourself on any piece of metal you touch. It put a lot of radiated heat into the cooling manifold. It made a noticable difference in oil and engine temp.
When it gets over a certain temp and the metal around your engine starts banking heat....you cannot get rid of the heat if hot air is circulating over it. Of course a missing seal is one thing. Leave out that rear piece of sheet metal...and it gets ungodly hot in the engine compartment.
Also...running without outside intake air for the TB...essentially turns the inlet through the alternator into a much higher volume intake. That much circulating cool air would do a great job of taking radiated heat out of the engine compartment.....into the engine though.
But still......the most essential seal/trunking of all on a 411/412 is the bellows feeding the cooling manifold. VW went to a lot of trouble to make sure that the TB had a feeder pipe from this cool inlet air on all type 4 models. Having seen how much radiated heat is inside of the engine compartment on a hot day in dallas.....why would I leave the TB trunking off to suck all of that through the engine? Ray