They just wanted the carb rebuilt, that should be easy according to all their friends.
Tell their friends to take a stab at it, and make sure that they keep their day jobs because they are going to get their asses handed to them trying to rebuild a commercially "remanufactured" carburetor and get it working correctly in all areas.
I make a living out of sorting out issues with completely "rebuilt" and "restored" carburetors from every single source out there. For the last 10 years of so I've opened up a couple of Saturdays a month to having folks bring entire vehicles here to get the engines tuned and running correctly.
By the time they get here all of the owners friends, beer drinking buddies, local shops, local "guru's" and even their next door neighbor has had a crack at fixing it.
It's ALWAYS the same thing, crappy parts, lack of attention to detail, and 9 times out of 10 someone put one of those POS spring/weight kits into the distributor and unhooked the vacuum advance.
You should see the looks I get when I "gut" the distributor and throw all that chit out before even doing anything with the carburetors, which is what they think is wrong in the first place.
Anyhow, large main airbleed carbs are really lean on the primary side right to start with. The companies that "remanufacture" those carbs often drill the lower idle airbleed out even larger, then install a HUGE idle tube (for reasons I'll never understand), then the wrong jets/metering rods and at the same time they drive lead plugs into the idle bypass air holes. To date I haven't seen a single one that didn't have the power piston hanger arms bent all over the place and the metering rods not even in the jets.
NONE of those moves will yield a good end result on 95 percent of the engines they get bolted to and the 5 percent that do run are just OK and not nearly as close as they should be........FWIW......Cliff