The best way of thinking about the the throttle is that it controls the AIR flow. NOT fuel flow, especially with CV carbs where there is no direct mechanical connection between the throttle and anything metering fuel delivery. Opening the throttle increases the amount of air the engine can ingest. Correct jetting adds the right amount of fuel to create the best AFR for that volume of air.
So opening the throttle on a fully warm engine initially ads more air to the rich pilot AFR and it picks up revs.
Rich mixture on a cold engine is required to start and warm up because the 'cold' head causes a lot of the fuel (which is a soup of many hydro-carbons with different volatilities) to remain liquid and therefore harder to ignite. So adding more fuel via the choke/enrichener increases the ignitability, as the amount of the lightest most ignitable volatile compound presented to the spark plug is increased. In a warm engine all the fuel is evaporated into vapor and easily ignited and burned.
When the engine is warm the rich mixture burns too slowly to sustain the idle.
My guess is that the pilot screws (fuel screws) are too far out (rich). Letting it die and then pulling the plugs will give you a heads up whether its rich or lean.
The pilot/fuel screws has maximum affect on the mixture on a closed throttle (idling), as its metering almost ALL the fuel into the engine, as you open the throttle the butterfly moves to uncover the by-pass orifices which draws more mixture from the pilot jet/pilot air jet, so the the proportion of the total pilot mixture trimmed by the fuel screw decreases rapidly as the throttle is cracked open.
If the plugs are sooty, progressively screw the fuel screws in a little by the same amount across all 4 screws and see if there is improvement.
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