Here's a couple of articles that look at tire diameter, wheel weight (but, whether tire or wheel, weight is the main issue). Of course its on BMW 3 series and a miata and we are talking track tests.
http://www.tirerack.com/wheels-techpage-1/108.shtmlhttp://www.grmotorsports.com/backissues/heavy-vs-light-wheels.phpWidth is a third dimension to the calculation.
The miata piece seemed to suggest that the light wheel weight was beneficial on the track by allowing more rapid suspension articulation that would allow greater traction (wheel contact with road) and faster lap times (course, we are talking .2 seconds, but that's all you need in a race)
The bmw piece showed the same 3 series with 205 tires and 16" wheels versus 245 tires on 17 inch wheels (17 inch wheels were alloys of two different weight, one 10lbs heavier than the other per wheel; with the 245s versus 205 you are talking a 1.5-2 (?) inch diameter increase which, in tests, cost you 1.3mpg). The 10lb-each heavier wheels seemed to cause a .4mpg decline (wouldn't be surprised if you find that a 1 inch tire diameter increase affects milage/performance roughly the same as a 10lb weight increase on a 1 inch smaller tire, maybe a little more, so long as tire width remained constant)
You might have a point bringing up the 33AT versus 32MT. The 10lb weight difference of the second may balance out the 1 inch diameter size increase of the first. Course, that's maybe if the widths are constant with both.