Sorry this is kind of long.
This was my first time ever rebuilding a carb. Got Cliff's book to get me started in getting the right knowledge. I learned a lot, but I still made some rookie mistakes. I used Cliffs kit so I knew I had the best parts, therefore all errors are on me.
The quad is a 4MV, I think. It's a 1970 CA model, that's about all I know off top of my head. It's sitting on a 350. I finished the rebuild, which wasn't as bad as people make it out to be, but maybe it wasn't so bad because I didn't do so good a job. I put idle mixture screws out 4 turns, and tried it. I didn't expect it to work, but it fired right up. However, I noticed after a short time, the gasket between the bowl and the throttle body was leaking fuel. It wasn't dripping, but it was wet right at the rear passenger side corner under the secondary bore. All I had done was start the engine, adjusted the fast idle a bit, revved it a little, got it warm enough for the choke to pull off and then revved a little bit more to look for leaks, which I was hoping not to see. At this point, I was thinking maybe I didn't get the throttle body screwed onto the bowl tight enough. I thought maybe it was leaky well plugs somehow getting fuel back there, but looking at it now, that doesn't seem like where the fuel would go if the plugs were leaking that badly. And I did do the soap test twice to be sure they were good. Then, I saw the gasket between the air horn and bowl was also getting wet front driver side, right in front of the accelerator pump.
Called in to Cliff's yesterday when this happened, left a message. Impatiently, called again today but got voicemail. Okay, I'm on my own until I hear back. Not complaining, Ray was really patient and helpful with me when I called in yesterday morning. I'm sure they are busy over there, so I thought I'd post here while I wait. So I just pulled the carb off and started taking it apart.
Throttle body screws were snug enough, I think. The diagram shows 3 screws, my model only has 2. I read around that people use loctite on these, maybe I'll do that next time around if anyone here recommends it. Throttle body appears very flat, as does the bottom of the bowl. Although, when I put them together, I do see the side have a little light showing, like the bowl can sort of rock on the throttle body side to side a little, making that gap where fuel was coming out. But a straight edge shows nothing out of flat and I think when it was together, everything looked really snug.
Moving on to the leak between air horn and bowl. Major rookie mistake I made was to not check the parts before assembling them. Just looking at the air horn, I can see its warped with my eyes. A straight edge shows it even more clearly. The front corners of the air horn where the long manifold bolts go are clearly bent downward from overtightening. Now, I got it pretty tight, but I just checked a spare air horn I got from the previous owner of my truck, and the spare is bent the same way. So I am assuming this one was already bent, but maybe I made it worse, because I don't recall a leak there before the rebuild. However, the little ridges seemed to make a good impression on the gasket. Just looking at the gasket, it looks like there was a good seal.