Wallace, I also went through frustrations in getting the WRD to function the way I want it to, much trial and error. The method that worked for me was to initially remove all of the shims on top of the air shut off valve. This resulted in a situation where the valve was not pushed down far enough by the thermostat to completely closer the air intake hole in the cylinder wall, and air was still being sucked in. I then sequentailly added shims until I just acheived complete elimination of air being sucked in, and I made note of the number of these shims required to acheived this. This was a PITA because I would have to wait until the engine re-cooled before I could add shims. Once I knew the number of shims that it took to shut off the air intake, then any additional shims affected only the amount of fuel that was passing through the FIP. But here's where things got tricky and I think I may have just stumbled upon the correct # of air valve shims by accident. Because at this point the engine is just about , if not fully warmed, and now the amount of fuel into the FIP depends not only upon the shims on the air valve, but also upon the # of those large shims under the WRD housiing AS WELL AS that knurled idle set screw on the back of the pump. I know that I played around with all 3 (the air valve shims, the WRD housing shims, the idle screw), and I used a CO meter. Alot of trial and error. I learned how sensitive those air valve shims are by doing it this way (the hard way?), but I'm sorry that I can't figure how to relate this, other than to say that you get a feel for it if you go through this process. Hope this helps.