Some mechanics not so familiar with our cars will use the intake venturi end stop screw + locking nut as the idle or the idle mixture adjustment.
I had this in mind last wednesday when a group member asked me whether I could have a look at his car, which was freshly restored, engine rebuilt etc etc, but running extremly poorly. So the first thing I checked was the position of the intake venturi flap (which should be almost binding i.e. as closed as possible - as pointed out here before) and, sure enough, it was very much open. The mechanic had set this adjustment and then proceeded onto other adjustments to try to get it to run right, which of course he did not manage. After adjusting the flap, and subsequently the idle mixture on the back of the FI pump and the large slotted air screw on top of the intake manifold toward the front, the car ran well. There was no CO meter around so we could not do fine-tuning, but the performance was light-years ahead of what it had been.
That was wednesday morning. Then in the afternoon, I went to pick up my own car which had been into a garage for its annual compulsory safety-fitness test and, lo-and-behold, the mechanic who did the testing said there was only one thing wrong: the CO-level was at 4% (which is where I had set it) and maximum allowed in the Netherlands was 3%. So ... he adjusted the air somewhat by ... adjusting the end stop screw on the intake venturi!
Twice the same problem in one day. So there are many mechanics who will make this mistake these days. It may be worthwile to have the basic adjustments checked by someone who knows how all this is supposed to be done, if you're not entirely sure about your regular mechanic. There have been many reports of owners who thought their car ran pretty good (sometimes for years), until it was finally adjusted properly.
Cees Klumper in Amsterdam
'69 white 280 SL automatic