Cees, Good catch. You are correct and your limb intact. the FIB is used to set the RPM, by setting the amount of fuel. Yes, the air screw on the intake manifold allows the appropriate amount of air at idle. (it e buttler fly (thottle) valve is supposed to be closed at idle, therefore NOT letting air into the manifold during idle. The butterfly valve is set to BITE the bore without binding at idle.)
"The knurled nut on the rear of the pump is not used to set idle on our cars." is absolutely wrong. That knob is all that sets (or meters) the amoung of fuel allowed to enter the injectors at Idle. The manifold screw meters the idle air,m and should be the only air source. Only those two should be used to set the idle RPM and A/F mixture.I
This can be very confusing and I resisted getting into it, but the statement is inaccurate. The problem maybe in how we think about the process. Since we can't turn the FIP screw with the motor running, then we adjust the air as the final adjustment. If the CO is in spec but the RPM is too low or high, then you adjust the gas with the knob and re-adjust the air until the RPM and CO are acceptable. But this should be a very clear point that the FIP adjustments determine the FUEL in the F/A ratio even at idle.
The knob will give you enough gas per click to raise or lower the RPM by about 50 RPM/click, in my experience, and of course you adjust the air after the fuel is changed.