As there are 4 adjustments for slide positions, it is possible to skew all the adjusters in a way that prevents them from reaching the bottom of possible travel and have the ability to close off all air feeding the engine. This also renders the main idle knob ineffective.
With the idle knob backed out, you need to pick a carb to assign as master, and ensure that this carb's slide can reach the floor of travel. With the stock air box this is not possible to see while installed. But, it can be inferred with a manometer reading. With the engine running, adjust your "master" carb (pick one) to the highest vacuum reading you can achieve. This signifies that the slide is more closed that the others, as the highest vacuum possible is when the slide is fully closed. It's a bit tricky, since it will be running on three and you'll still want the lowest idle speed you can get. Once the "master" has the highest reading, lock off that adjuster, and don't mess with it again while adjusting the slides on the others to the same vacuum level as the master, even though the "masters" vacuum reading will change. Once you get all the slides to an even reading, the Idle knob should be effective again to set idle speed. But, if all the slides have been skewed to the extreme, you may have to go through the whole process again with a lower idle idle speed while setting the "master" position.
I don't recommend using drill bits for syncing these carbs. Far too easy to have the exact problem you are encountering.
Cheers,