here's HM's post, but w/out pics. pics show the carb bowl and circut path.
"This is for CB750, but roughly applies to any slide-type carb.
You already know how to "clean" the carbs normally: remove the jets and spray Brake Cleaner or Carb Cleaner through the holes until they come out clean. This usually works. Some of you are soaking the whole disassembled bodies for days to get the last passage clean: this will speed up that process. After all, mechanics only get paid a fixed amount to "clean carbs"...
We have all suffered through a (finally gone) period of MTBE-laced gasoline, which attacks the metal of these carbs. The result is a fine white powder (corrosion, actually) that migrates everywhere. If it is allowed to thoroughly dry (like 2 years or so), it hardens inside the passages and narrows (or blocks) them. This alters the mixture properties of the passages.
I was sorely reminded of this when I recently fired up my long-sitting 750, post rebuild. The Emulsifier Air Bleed passages in 3 of the carbs acted like they were blocked (black sparkplugs), but they would pass Brake Cleaner through them. This implied (correctly) that they were PARTIALLY blocked, which is hard to clean. This is a very common problem on bikes that have been sitting long or are ridden infrequently after being fueled with MTBE gas.
The following few pix show how to clean this problem. The first one shows the entry to this passage: it's a little brass jet in the air horn. The second pix shows the passage's direction, and how long the wire has to reach inside to get all the way to the Needle Jet in the center of the carb. The third pix, if you look real carefully, shows the wire up against the side of the Needle Jet, having pushed its way fully through. Since there is a Z-shaped dogleg at the beginning of this passage, use a wire that will bend, not a stiff piano wire. Push, pull, push again: the wire will progress and the crud will break up and work its way to the edges of the Needle Jet, where it can then be flushed away. Be patient and straighten the wire several times, trying again until you can look down into the Main Jet Holder's hole and see the tip of the wire bumping into the Needle Jet's side. You'll be able to feel it opening up the passage."
good luck, worked for me.