Here's a few thoughts on the 77/78 pumper carbs. First off, don't waste your time with carb performance tuning till your carbs are actually functioning properly. The pressed in pilots in these 30 year old carbs are almost always to some degree clogged. So pull them out with a gentle twisting motion and really clean them. Can you run a single strand of copper wire thru them? Are the side holes clean. Do a reality check of the level of fuel in the bowls. Connect clear tubing to the brass overflow nubs, drain the fuel from the carbs, mount the carbs level in a vice, tape the tubing up high along the carb bodies, fuel up the carbs, open up the drain screws and observe the level of fuel in the tubing. This is the actual level of fuel in the bowls and they should all be exactly the same and just around even with the bowl to carb body joint. Visually confirm the function of the acellerator pump. Remove the airbox and look for a nice squirt of fuel towards the engine from each brass nozzle (located on the bottom of the carb bore near the choke plates). The needle jet ("bushing" that the main jet needle slides in and out of. Has a distinct impact of just off idle performance)is an overlooked part in the carb rebuild process and after 30 years can be crudded up and worn. Same goes true for the main jet needles. You can actually buy a new set of main jet needles specced for the 77 models (I got mine from David Silver Spares) that have muliple slots for needle height adjustment. These come with new needle jets. This will cure performance issues related to wear and contamination of these parts and will give those with the 78 carbs the option of raising or lowering their main jet needles with clips. . . .As to perforamnce tuning, stock #35 pilots are more than adequate for my 78K 836 cammed with pods and stock exhaust. I drilled a set of pilots to aproximate #40s but these were too rich. I currently have a stock set of 35s in and idle fuel mix screws are set at about 1 1/8th turns out and the power is excellent. The dynamics of carb tuning is alot more complicated than always simply throwing more fuel into mix. Do yourselves a favor start with the stock 35s and adjust the fuel mix for best off idle power. If power keeps increasing as you turn the screws counter clockwise till and you are at about 3 turns out then you need larger pilots. While I found that my pilot jets were large enough for my application, I did need to increase the size of my main jets (about 125s now) and raise the main jet needle up a bit. Overall, performance is excellent with these carbs particularly the immediate throttle response they offer. Sure a set of 29mm Keihin CRs or Mikuni smoothbores might give you the most power at WOT but how much time do you actually spend in those conditions?? Hope this helps someone . . .