ThumperLife had the new Genuine Suzuki needle jet and needle sent to me. I left the new parts in their original packages and sent them back to Texas with the carburetor. You should have that carb in 3 or 4 days TL; please LMK that you receive it OK. It's insured for $900 bucks.
I left the carb as-is. That way we can learn how well the PUDA carb parts work on the road.
TL, please install the carb as-is and try it out. Ride it around and let us know how well the carburetor works. If you don’t like the way it works, and you don’t feel that some minor adjustments will iron out the kinks, you have the new OEM parts. We all know those will work good. But as you can see from my ops test video, that carburetor is working just fine as-is. It just needs a road test to confirm. You might need to make fine adjustments to the idle mixture setting or the e-clip position on the needle.
I don’t know how your bike is configured. I’m pretty sure I have asked you about that. If you have a stock airbox and a moderate exhaust setup (like a Dyna muffler on a stock header), that #145 main jet should work fine. I lapped your #152.5 to the new PUDA needle jet, so it fits the PUDA unit OK. If you want to run a #147.5 or a #150, don’t force them into the needle jet. If they bind, you will have to lap the threads on the new jets. It’s easy, but it requires removal of the needle jet, and it takes a few minutes. Needless to say, you wanna clean the components up real good after the thread lapping. Testing the bike on the road with the PUDA components installed will be most beneficial to all of us. I’m sure I can speak for the other members when I say that we all will really appreciate you giving it a whirl and letting us know how it goes.
In the event that you are unsure about the R&R procedure, I did a tutorial video. If you decide to change the parts, this video should provide enough information to complete the task. It's not my best effort, and I continually screw up and refer to the needle jet as the "needle valve", and contradict myself on retainer plate orientation (the teet goes down), but I'm pretty sure you will figure out that the old geezer making the vid just went a bit foggy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DqEYuwm0hw0Keep us in the loop.