Certainly not advice here only how it seems to me. Consider the source - never done it, I know nothing! Nothing!
Just plucking my slightly angled duel sequential carb assembly out of the boot a couple times was bad enough. Parts! I can't get any of those parts, moral of the story there - always drain the bowls.
I've read a fair bit including the manual on removing the assembly, I was close to doing it but had no cause to risk it other than wanting to clean out and inspect the vee area, check and flush out the drain area, well not gonna happen this go round. I found every TB clamp only finger tight, I believe the correct setting is supposed to be a 7mm gap, in any event I applied a bit of force and the assy is rock solid. I'm pretty sure the only way I would attempt it when the time comes is to mark up the assembly for reference then loosen or disconnect the interconnecting brackets between the two banks, then I'd only be wrastling a TB pair in line with their respective boots albeit a small amount at a time going from 13 to 24. Then at reassembly set the loose assembly upside down onto the lower air box for a final compliant fit check, then maybe tighten it up and try to press it back in as a rigid assembly, or just check and adjust the initial marks, and fit it down loose one side at a time. I might be messing with a jigsaw slinky trapazoid mess but maybe not a broken mess. Like I say, if I jump off a bridge, doesn't mean.. well you know what I mean, just how it seems to make the most sense looking at it.