This is great information. I was having difficulty getting a clean transition into the mains. It went rich right off idle.
Idle circuit = Low speed Circuit.
Test out the idle characteristics yet?
Somethin gon the order of this.
Fuel level of course, then find the number of tturns of the idle stop screw needed to reveal .10, .020 , .030, .040 of the slot. Put that in your notebook so you dont have to remoe th ecarb to know how of the t-slot is revealed.
Warm up the engine and set the t-slots at .025 and see what you can do with the idle mix screws.
If the engine is dying, you can try more throttle opening and later will see about working back toward .025 There's nothing magic about .025, its just a starting point. We know the somewhere around .040" will be too much exposed at idle and close to zero exposed will be too little.
Idle rpm can be adjusted using timing and/or air (through PCV, or 'idle-eze', or checking the secondaries or drilling the primary throttle plates).
Once its warmed up, see if you can get the t-slots to .025 or at least .035. Then run the idle mixscrews in and see if reducing the idle port fuel allows the idle AFR to be tuned. Set the idle mix for the best lean (running in 'til it drops or starts to falter and then richen an 1/8 or 1/4 turn)
If its an automatic, put it D and see if the rpms stay close to where they were in N.
You can try to change one thing and repeat, and with an automagic you can get a sense of what each of these changes have on idle in gear. When you've had enough of that for a while, then try a very slow accelleration.
I'm going to guess that this engine has so-so manifold vacuum at idle, and so off idle manifold vacuum increases resulting in a much stronger signal on the idle circuit. Off idle is IFR and IAB along with the t-slot. So work the IAB and the IFR along with the initial throttle position to improve the off-idle. Use the idle port to get the fuel mix at dead idle. Try bleeding a little more air in if the t-slot exposure is over .035. Try using a bit more initial timing if the rpms are too low and so forth.