I have built and ran two carburetors on my stock 350 Chevy. Both carburetors were originally released on 350 Chevrolet engines in the 1970's. The carbs are 17059217 originally for a '79 Camaro, and a 17056202 originally for a '76 Camaro. Both are large main air bleed carbs.
Getting either carb to idle correctly with the bypass air fully open is impossible. Both have baseplates with .080" air bypass holes drilled from the factory in them. Both bodies are fully open for bypass air.
The 9217 has .033" idle tubes, .046" idle down restrictions, and .080" idle screw holes in the base.
The 6202 has .036" idle tubes, .046" idle down restrictions, and ,095" idle screw holes in the base.
I wound up going from fully open bypass air where I had the idle screws out 6 1/2 turns and it still wouldn't stay running to closing them off fully. (like the rebuilder guys do). I got the car to idle smooth but low at 475-500 rpm. I turned the idle stop screw in lots to get it to idle at 650ish, but had no nozzle drip.
The throttle blades were right at starting to uncover the ported vacuum advance slot. With a vacuum gauge connected to the ported source I could see 1-2" Hg at where I had bumped up the idle screw.
Cliff said to give it more fuel in an earlier post, hence the 6202 with larger orifices.
Still, not happy at idle unless I plug or restrict bypass air.
I wound up taking two plastic rods and made my own baseplate air bypass restrictions at .050". The car now idles at 550ish warm, but still wants more fuel as evident by placing my hand over the choke horn and hearing it speed up a little.
I have 18" of Hg at this point at idle.
Basically, it is known that:
'70s Chevy 350's were around 8:1 compression and had a small camshaft producing high manifold vacuum.
GM used the ported vacuum source to raise exhaust temps at idle for emissions.
Initial timing on these Camaro's were between 6 and 8 degrees BTDC
Dual plane intakes
Cast iron manifolds
Catalytic converters
Yet they had carburetors with the bypass air fully open and they idled at 600 rpm. As well as having restrictive idle circuits.
It puzzles me that I have more fuel and more initial timing yet I cannot get the car to idle with bypass air open fully, as the carburetors were originally delivered.