Joji, That seems like a reasonable enough theory.
Thanks for the explanation about rich jetting in race cars, John. I don't have any way to verify it but it sounds plausible.
All this talk is reminding me of how I can think I understand the principles behind a design but only get the obvious part and miss critical aspects. I don't remember what the internals of the Stromberg look like, but it may have a similar design to the SU. It has a jet that sits in a sort of an upside down 'V' shaped rise that goes across the entire throat and was probably 1/3 the diameter of the throat (see crude text picture):
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At the top of the 'V', there was a squared off section where the jet opening was. It was common to give a slight radius to the piston to increase flow and some tuners would hog out the 'V' shaped part and just put a ramp the width of the jet in front of and up to the jet. Of course, that let in a lot more air and the ramp was supposed to allow increased air flow to pull the fuel out of the jet. Well, I got the bright idea to radius that 'V' taking off the square part on top figuring that would give more flow and that flow wold suck up the required fuel. Well, it didn't work, I burned a few pistons and to trying to get around that, I had to make it so rich, it wouldn't run (thinking about it, it might have worked with the correct needles but I didn't have ready access to a dyno or a practice track). I think the reason it didn't work is that the square part induced turbulence that sucked out more fuel and properly mixed it up. I don't know how the carbs with the ramps worked.
(thanks for indulging my short walk down memory lane!)