And well, that's really all I've done. The only other things I can think of that are often cited as a reason for wet airhorn gaskets are...
A. Warped airhorn, which yes, mine is (of course). About .020" warpage. A thick .062" airhorn gasket seals it just fine so that the carb and therefor the car runs as intended.
One thing I'm curious about is WHY a warped airhorn would cause the airhorn gasket to soak? I see all the time that a warped airhorn causes gasket soaking, but WHY? Nobody ever explains WHY. It doesn't make much sense... especially since my airhorn and fuel bowl are both original and warped to generally the same degree.
B. Maybe I'm getting fuel boiling during heat soak? Doesn't make much sense, either... the fuel pump has the vapor return line. Just in case, I applied vacuum to the return fuel rail back to the tank and was able to suck fuel back right from the tank, so it's not clogged. Besides, I have no problems with hot starts or any true flooding symptoms, so I'm guessing the vapor return is working the way it should. (I live in Florida, FYI.)
One thing I should note, however; is that even though the car fires and starts up just fine even after a heat soak, it will idle rough until you give it some gas for 15-20 seconds or a few revs of the motor, then it's all good and I can hit the road. Maybe I am getting some minor degree of fuel boiling? For what it's worth, I'm using a 1/8" thick flange gasket, a Fel-Pro one, along with the factory heat plate under it. Did the factory originally use 1/4" insulator mounting gaskets on these cars? Just in case, I have a 1/4" one on the way and will try it out and see if that fixes the problem. Since the fuel pump is NOS, I only use REC-90 ethanol-free fuel. (I'm well aware that even ethanol-free fuel of modern formulation boils way easier than the fuels of yesteryear.)
C. And then finally, as has been stated on this forum before, maybe these modern airhorn gaskets just aggressively wick fuel no matter what you do? As in, to a point where the simple transfer of idle fuel up the tubes, across the transfer opening in the gasket and to the DCRs, is enough to soak the gasket over time? But then that wouldn't explain why not everybody has wet airhorn gaskets.
So what's going on here? I've tried just about everything, but this is still happening. Like I said, more of an annoyance than anything else. Car runs just fine, just wish my airhorn gasket would remain dry.
Thanks, everyone!