This is my opinion. You can listen to it, or ignore it. Either is your prerogative.
You are over thinking these temperature issues. 400-450 deg CHTs do NOT hurt your engine. Obsessing over keeping them below 400 is causing you great concern that is unwarranted. The picture of your instrumentation in post #38 shows CHT numbers that look fairly normal. You have a carb. It is going to be difficult to get all 4 cylinder’s CHTs to be as close as an engine with fuel injection. 385, 389, 398, 392 CHTs are all actually pretty tight for cruise, especially for a carbed engine. Plus, they are NOT running hot for running the engine pretty hard at 4500 ft.
On climb out, those temperatures may climb above 400 deg but don’t lose sleep over worrying about them. If they climb up to 420, or such, know that when you level off in cruise they will settle back down. I might suggest doing some configuration on your instrument to place the fuel burn (gal/hr or lt/hr) to show on your engine display. I did not see that anywhere on your display in post #38. That will be helpful information for your analysis of engine performance more so than the nm/lt you are currently displaying.
As others have posted, perhaps you can clean up your baffling some and see improvement but what you show is not a real problem. Keep flying and keep learning about your engine. You are asking questions and many are giving you good advice. Learn from the questions, and the subsequent responses, but don’t over think it all. As time behind the stick progresses you will become more familiar with how your plane performs and less baffled (I think there is a pun there somewhere) by unknowns.
Live Long and Prosper!