Cliff, I'm working on a 1969 Chevelle vert I bought in 2008. It had a 307, power glide, performer intake, headers and a holley with an electric choke. It ran very good. No issues with cold starts. Its a summertime "drive through the coastal mountains on weekends" driver. The glide started acting up and was swapped out for a 700r4.
The 307 was just not up to the task of driving up and down the mountains. It was constantly down shifting on every climb. Vey annoying. I wanted an engine that could cruise at 1500 rpm (about 35 mph) without having to down shift on the climbs.
I settled on a 400 sbc, builted to be a low speed torque engine. It has stock 441 heads, mild cam, perfomer RPM, headers and a 7029207 q-jet. The crossover is functional and has the thicker carb gasket. The rpm intake uses the 1970 style divorced choke.
The choke did stay on longer than normal but as a summertime driver it was not an issue. That 400 sbc did exactly what I wanted. Low speed cruising without having to down shift on climbs. More time enjoying the drive with the top down and little time working the gas pedal to maintain speed.
Winter driving was a whole different situation. Every couple months the car was driven to circulate the fluids and dry out any accumulated moisture. The choke would stay on waaaay too long.
For example, I picked up the car from storage, drove 5 mile on the freeway, drove back to my house on surface streets, pulled in the driveway and the choke was still on! I can't explain it, but that's what happens during the winter.
I ended up changing the q-jet with a hot air choke model converted to electric. Problem solved! The engine starts and runs beautifully when cold. Choke goes off in about two minutes and runs great.
The engine really does not need the crossover to run well (not in calif) when cold. Just needs choke control for initial start up.
To the member with the 396 comment, I also have a 1969 Nova with a 396, headers and q-jet. If you know the car this is a very big engine in a small engine bay. Everything is very close and tight. The divorced choke is not a problem. Air flow around the engine is limited and the choke/engine heats up relatively quickly.