Thanks, I corrected it

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Was in a hurry, should have said, "Todays fuels are not friendly to carburetors", I'll add heat as well which is why I suggested blocking off the crossovers at the cylinder head.
If using an aluminum intake with no crossover and the passages ae left open they will still heat the manifold which will transfer to the carburetor.
if one has a larger air cleaner like a dual snorkel size? It will trap the heat radiating off the manifold and raise fuel temps. If your fuel line happens to run through that area it increases the chances for problems.
In a few stubborn cases I've had to actually make an aluminum plate to block the heat radiating off the crossover area to cure the vapor lock issues the owner was having.
If one can access non - ethanol fuel (in older cars) that is STRONGLY encouraged as the ethanol will deteriorate fuel system components made prior to ~ 2010. Some of the early braided hoses will literally crumble. Accelerator pumps, hoses, fuel pump diaphragms are all
Another thing I forgot to mention is the Edelbrock carbs have had a tendency to percolate fuel on a hot day. This is a well known problem. I do not know if they've corrected it yet or not (my guess is not).
I like using phenolic spacers between the carb and manifold on any setup.
hope my ramblings are helpful to some .