The "7A" designator, as far as I've been able to discover, indicated the new molds that were more precise that made the 657A series carb bodies: they are crisper renditions of the same carb. Those carbs appeared intermittently in the late K1, early K2, the K4, and F1 versions of the 750, based on the notes I've taken as I get to work on them (for decades). Honda had no defining literature on the 7A, but inside they look like more nicely-done 657A carbs. So, be cautious of the 'internet carb ninjas' who swear they know about the 7A carbs...
Float level for all 7A carbs with brass floats were 25mm and for plastic ones 26mm, as measured when disassembled: these are actual values I measured, not someone notes, "specs" or claims.
The jetting and needle setting rules for these follow the general settings for the year of the bike. In the K1 bikes with the 657A and 7A carbs made after 8/71 the mainjets were #110 with the needle clips in the 3rd notch (from the blunt top end) of the needles. This required, however, the use of the HM300 exhaust pipes: if the same carb was used in the later bikes with more restrictive pipes (K2 onward) the mainjet was normally #105 with the needle clip in the 4th notch. The 7A carbs came with plastic floats in the later bikes, too, except in the early F0 bikes when they were brass.
There are a few exceptions to this (including my own 750, a mix-and-match bike from rushed production in late 1972). For example, mine came with #110 mainjets and the needle clips in the 4th notch, using the AD125 spark advancer (very K1 early tuning) and an early K1 cam. It fouled sparkplugs in 500 miles, black as pitch, as it came from Honda. It also had brass floats in the carbs until MTBE ate them in the early 2000 era. (Now they are plastic.)