Peter, I can address some of this...
Idle and main metering systems are under control of the ECM and so
it is driving your air/fuel mixtures based on read only software in the
PROM chip.
Unless you rewrite those tables the system will keep trying to attain
factory values.
The system is dependent on accurate TPS values, O2 sensor voltages,
MAP voltages and some systems even had a BARO sensor.
The TPS in particular generally returns about .5 volts to nearly 5 volts
and the ECM will use this in scheduling. I've seen some TPS sensors
well over a volt in the idle position, and that will shift things a bit.
Also the oxygen sensor is a limited life part. The original Delco's are
the best, but they can all get lazy then go flatline.
About 30,000 miles is the best life span for the O2 sensors, and sure
some will perform beyond this.
I find that today's replacements are NOT consistent, with some becoming
useless in a matter of days.
I tune the 1981 system cars with the Dwell meter procedures that I showed
in the other thread. But...
All of that assumes the ECM is getting good data from it's sensors!
Sorting this out isn't hard, it simply requires the use of a 1981 capable scan
tool. Actually, these aren't very expensive, typically $40 or so on eBay.
So, I scan the sensors first to ensure the ECM is getting good info, then
use the Dwell meter for tuning.
Obviously the ECM sends a GO rich command at WOT and doesn't run
the show.
Does this help?
Joe