Carbs are a series of imprecise passages and precision surfaces. It is the precision surfaces that make it run correctly, and they are all removable. The locked together carb bodies only hold the passages, and 99% of the time those passages only need cleaned with solvent and blown out. I scrub varnished surfaces with berrymans, let it soak a while, scrub it some more with a toothbrush or scotch-brite pad pieces, then rinse with gumout (repeat as needed). A fine brush on a dremel tool will also take dried varnish off, even from the floats. It is much easier (and effective, in my opinion) to spend the time scrubbing surfaces than to disassemble/soak/clean/reassemble. Anyways, it is the precision surfaces that need most of the attention. They need to be soaked, cleaned, scrubbed, opened with fine copper wires, inspected, rinsed with gumout and blown out. Don't worry about mixing the jets when soaking and cleaning, they are all precision parts (just check that all the sets are matching).
Disassembly is a daunting task with the seized screws and flying springs, and reassembly is worse if you don't have 3 hands (or remember exactly how the synchronizer screws go). Newbies think this is the only way to go and it just isn't. I think it mostly causes more problems than it cures. I know that there are definitely times when disassembly is needed, but rarely. I have worked at several shops (ten years total) and have done hundreds of carbs, and probably 10 were disassembled.
And of course you don't have to destroy that wonderful black paint on some of your carbs.....
In a previous thread, Trippivot voiced a similar opinion.
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