Hi, Adrian...let's see if I can scour my brains to help put the pieces together.
First, some basics...
The vacuum in the manifold, on the "other side" of the throttle butterfly, doesn't have a lot to do with the carb operation. On "this side" of the butterfly, it's all about the <span style="font-style: italic">amount </span>of airflow. A closed throttle pulls less air through the throat of the carb, and over the venturi, than an open throttle.
There's atmospheric air pressure in the float bowl, and atmospheric air pressure on the bottom side of the piston diaphragm. On the top side of the piston diaphragm, is the same low air pressure as is flowing over the venturi.
At idle, with the butterfly closed, there's raging vacuum in the manifold, but in the carb, only a small amount of air is pulling past the venturi. The piston is sitting low, with the needle deep in the jet. The small space for the air to squeeze by causes it to move faster, making a spot of low air pressure right over the jet. The gas is pushed out the jet past the needle. The piston has the low air pressure of the venturi above it, and it is pushed upwards--just a little--by atmospheric pressure.
Now, stomp on the gas. The butterfly opens up, and the manifold vacuum drops as the engine breathes deep. In the carb, a <span style="font-style: italic">much </span>larger volume of air is forced through the carb throat and through that tiny space over the venturi. The air has to move much faster to make it past, and the air pressure over the jet plummets. A large amount of gas is pushed out the jet into the airstream (despite the needle still being deep in the jet). Meanwhile, that huge drop in air pressure is also over top the piston, and atmospheric pressure tries to force the piston upwards. It can't, immediately, because the dashpot oil slows it down. That gives you the extra shot of gas for acceleration.
The piston is slowly pushed up, because the low air pressure over the venturi is also atop the piston, relative to the high atmospheric pressure under the piston diaphragm. The space under the piston opens up. All that air isn't squeezed through the venturi as quickly, since the venturi is bigger now, and the speed of the air over the jet slows down. With slower speed comes higher air pressure, and the gas isn't pushed up the jet as vigorously. The needle, mounted on the bottom of the piston, is further out of the jet, so the gas can flow easier, even with the increased air pressure. This increased air pressure is now also over the top of the piston, remember, so it stops rising.
The results of this ballet dance is that the piston always finds a spot where the volume of air flowing past is balanced with the speed through the venturi, so --get this-- the actual venturi <span style="font-style: italic">pressure</span>, whether idling or running WOT, is <span style="font-style: italic">always the same!</span>
To use an electrical analogy, airflow is Amps, venturi speed is Volts, and the piston keeps the Watts constant. More amps, fewer volts; less amperage, more voltage.
When you let off the throttle, the butterfly shuts, and the volume of air through the carb drops dramatically. The wide-open venturi now has so little airflow through it, and thus such high pressure, that the piston drops like a rock. The space under the venturi squeezes down until the air speed through it is fast enough to drop the pressure again. The piston balances that pressure up top, and holds its position so that the constant pressure over the venturi is maintained. Ain't it a beautiful system?? :banana: Just a handful of moving parts and the laws of physics.
Here's where blocking off the air cleaner comes into play. Restricting the intake decreases the pressure slightly through the carb throat. (It's the same thing that happens in the manifold when the throttle's shut, but on a <span style="font-style: italic">much </span>smaller scale.) The airflow through the carb would then start out as <span style="font-style: italic">slightly less </span>than atmospheric pressure. Remember, the piston has atmospheric pressure pushing it up. So, when the air, already slightly low pressure, runs through the venturi, the venturi pressure would be slightly lowered too. The piston would then be pushed up slightly higher throughout all the engine's range, as the piston maintains that same low pressure--<span style="font-style: italic">lower pressure than it would have been if the air cleaner were free flowing</span>. The higher piston opens up the venturi, slowing the airflow through it. The gas isn't pushed out the jet as easily, and --voila-- the engine runs leaner at all speeds.
It is certainly possible to fit different jets and weaker piston springs to compensate for the increased pressure: basically you're resetting the carb balance. Nothing wrong with that. But restricting the intake does the same thing. Ever wonder why SU air cleaners have those teensy tiny snorkles...?
Whew! :tired: I can try to find/make a diagram, too, if that'll help out any. :thumbsup: Sorry for being so long-winded.