
Now to the bad stuff. The car was running perfect with the stock carbie. Not even a bit of engine smoke, started first time every time and didn't miss a beat. Now with the dual Solex carbies, the car is a bit harder to start on cold weather due to the mechanical chokes not being connected (in the process of fixing that though). Once the car warms up a bit, I can get it to idle and rev without misfire for about 10 to 15 seconds then it seems to start strugling more and more until it stalls, and if I try to rev it it seems to make things worse and cause it to stall even quicker. It's almost as if it starts and runs fine then it gets flooded with too much fuel and stalls.

Can anyone help? Am I right to think its just getting too much fuel? Could it be the secondaries vaccuum solenoid being stuck on open? The carbies seem to be getting correct amount of fuel and I don't think the fuel pressure is too high as the electric pump I'm running runs at 4 to 7 psi. Do I really need a pressure regulator?
I've done a few searches here in the forum but the only people I found with similar issues didn't really post what was wrong in the end and how they fixed it.
Any help, suggestions and comments would be greatly appreciated.
*edit* the engine photo above was taken just as a mockup of what it was going to look like with the twin carb airfilter. Note the factory-stock air/fuel separator (little crappy surge tank near the battery) was still connected. I've had many issues in the past when fiting aftermarket carbies to Sigmas due to these little surge tanks so the first thing I did was remove it! The fuel line from the fuel pump is split into two and then goes to each carbie at equal length, so both carbies should be getting equal amounts of fuel and fuel pressure. The electric Facet fuel pump is rated at 4 to 7 psi. I got this model because the stock mechanical pump was rated at 3.9 to 5.6 psi according to two different workshop manuals (one of them being a proper Chrysler/Mitsubishi original dealership one).