Tommy, I apologise if I offended you.
The slowing down I refered to was in your repairs. Your carb book says that 10 psi idling is OK? What does the fuel pressure do when you work the throttle (like when you back up or take off)? Is the power valve bad? If it is, and you replace it, will it be lean at max load or max boost? How much pressure can a plastic filter stand before it blows apart and starts a big fire? 10 psi plus 15 psi of boost (boost referenced pump) equals 25 psi fuel pressure. So his filter worked, will mine work at that pressure?
Maybe I should ditch the filter I can see thru and rely on my sight plug and pressure guage?
I am not trying to be critical. These are the questions that pop into my head. The more questions that pop into your head and the more you solve, the better prepared you will be.
I know the float is adjusted just about as high as it will go as it still hadnt been showing in the sight plug, but I havent checked it with the pump...
In my opinion, this is something you can't afford to not know. I just meant to check everything. You are a bright young man and you have the skill. If you checked everything possible and listed everything you had checked, with the results, you will get better answers. Often times, when you check everything, you will be posting about the problem you found and how you fixed it.
The comment about choking you.

I was smiling when I typed it. I ment no harm or disrespect. It is something I would have said to my son. Now that I think about it, I guess you felt you were being disiplined in public. This was not my intention. I guess I am not as good a teacher as I once was.
When I disiplin you I will use this one.
As I see it, some people have more mechanical ability than others. I personaly think you have just as much ability as most on this board. The differences between you and me are age and experience. The way to get experience and the knowledge that it brings is to solve the puzzle. Look at everything and make observations. Work the puzzle and come up with your own answer then check your answer with others. In this day and age, the internet has helped and hurt us. It is real convenient to ask a question and not take the time to solve the puzzle. Only by solving the puzzle, will you gain the knowledge you seek. When you solve the puzzle you will also get the how and why that go with the answer. The how and why, are more important than the answer.
When I had more time and patience. While training a new hand in the shop, I would often answer a question with a question. I would make them think. I would ask them to come up with what they would do if I weren't there and then come to me with the plan. Then, if there was a better way, or if I had anything to add, I would help them. More than once, the teacher learned from the pupil. What I am trying to say here is, I feel you have alot to bring to the table, if you will slow down enough to solve the puzzle.
As for what you do with your tires. Ben there, done that. 8)