Well Ray, the physical restriction causes the air velocity to increase which lowers its pressure, in the entire throat of the carb. While the whole operational principal of how a carb works is based on Bernoulli's law, the choke merely accentuates that effect temporarily, to keep a cold engine running because of fuel droplets condensing out of the mixture. Its not dependent on precisely where the jets are and in fact in this pic you can see the main nozzle below the choke. The idle jets are below the throttle plate. This is from my Chilton's manual American cars 1970-1977 lol....ancient stuff.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/ncpyim8e196lc ... 20work.bmpIn the end, carb vs EFI, for an older boat I am glad I have a carb. The problem with EFI, is not technical per se. It is the crappy way companies do business. As in, when the product ages, certain parts become
No...Longer....Available....(NLA) and then the owner is
S....O....L...
I just read about this on Boatered, a guy with a '98 Merc with EFI, had to get a new PCM and get this, Merc discontinued it but was willing to sell him one for $4,000. LOL. He wound up finding one in Cali, for $1500, but I would have converted that to a carb no way I'd give them that cash for a PCM. I got one for my '98 Jeep when it was 15 years old for 400 and that was an OE Mopar one!
With carbs and simple points n condenser ignition, everything is in the aftermarket. No NLA/SOL issues.