The float bowl is very small on the IDA carb, and the biggest needle valve is small too, so for a decent engine you can end up running the bowl dry after a few pulls. Might get away with it on a road car or a more standard engine, but I was having issues.
There's a space in the casting that isn't normally connected with the float bowl on a weber IDA, but with a bit of machining you can internally open this up for more float bowl volume. My mate did this for me and unfortunately he machined through the external bowl wall.

Let this be a warning, be really careful machining your IDA!

I plugged it up with JB weld

He also machined the top cover of my carb, the fuel inlet into the carb was bored out to 8mm.

and the place where the fuel filter goes drilled to 5mm. The fuel filter could still go on, but I am leaving it out as I have a pre and post pump fuel filter, and the internal one is restrictive.

I changed the needle valve too, webers biggest is a 300 size, and I ordered a 400 size, but received a 350 size.
I also changed from a weber 48 to a much nicer empi 51, which had the internal bowl mod done already, and my intake manifold was actually already ported for a 51mm, but the carb I got with it was a 48.
I also had problems with fuel pressure, everyone says a weber works ok with 3.5-4psi. Might be the difference in calibration from one gauge to the next, but for me this was fine with the engine off, but with the engine running none of my needle valves would stay seated and the float level would sometimes creep up, and generally not stay consistent whilst running, but be ok when trying to check the float level statically and no dripping with engine off. I found this out by buying a float level site glass from empi. Really good bit of kit and I reccomend this site glass over any other way of trying to guestimate whether float level or fuel pressure is set right. On my gauge it like 2.5psi of fuel pressure and no more than 3.
