Stumbling Slant --what is left??

These are some great ideas. I think I have addressed some of them already. I checked with a propane torch to look for leaks around the carb and intake, and did not find any. It appears that the engine is/was running rich, as new plugs look like this after less than an hour of operation:View attachment 1715909198

Six is on the bottom, and #1 on the top of the image. So the time on these plugs was before I replaced the carb. Doing a wet float check on the new carb, it seemed a bit high (2 or 3 32nds above the 27/32 level) so I adjusted the float a bit. And while I was at it, put the float spring in correctly; it was in at an angle. I would guess this is something that might happen in shipping.

I'll need some education on what "bopping" a valve entails. Is this tapping on the rocker arm over the valve with a hammer, or brass hammer, or plastic mallet; or with a wood block in combination with any of those? is it pulling off the rockers to hit the valve directly?

I don't think the fuel system is a problem; I tried running it with a 2-liter bottle of known good gas plumbed directly into the fuel filter and it seemed to run the same. I also dosed it with Heet to try and eliminate that as a cause; back in '86 that fixed a similar problem that came down to a load of bad gas I got while I was hauling a 2 axle U-Haul cross country. But that's a story for another time.

I'll get a 195 stat and try that also. What I heard "back in the day" was that to de-gunk an engine, you poured ATF into the intake till the engine stalled, then let it sit overnight. But your bopping method seems like a more reliable method of removing deposits.

Thanks for your thoughts and time.

Bill
You hold the throttle to 2500 rpm and drizzle trans fluid OR WATER down the carb and watch the smoke cloud out the tail pipe