It ran fine on the EB so I don’t think it’s spark or fuel. Timing was offset to the max allowable by ca. There is a ton of exhaust so I thought it was running super rich and couldn’t dial it back. I figured the hinge pin was stuck and not dropping in. When I opened it up it was th opposite, the hinge pin didn’t have the little hook to hang on the float. So after fixing that and adjusting the float, I was back at square one. The vacuum set up is slightly different between the 2 carbs so that could be a clue. The new carb does not have one of the ports the old carb had. There’s a port that goes from the carb body to a control valve and then back to a 2nd vacuum break. I tested for the correct vacuum type and Td off another and seems to be correct. Basically with the new carb, there’s a ton of exhaust and it runs louder and rougher. I can send some pics later. Thanks!
The fact that you had to open up the carb and make repairs on a "fresh" carb concerns me. I'd definitely reach out to National to get their 2cents. If those basic items were wrong, then I'd question the whole thing. If you wanted to check, you could verify the idle mixture screws. You could turn them in and count the number of turns. They should both be the same # of turns between the left and right side and likely between 2-3 turns.
I'm not sure what you mean by "ton of exhaust". Is that black smoke out of the exhaust or a rich smell? Also, I'm not sure what louder would be, but rougher does sound like it could be way out of tune or the carb is just dumping fuel. I'd pull a couple of plugs to verify.
For the vacuum, I'd start off by plugging all of the vacuum ports on the carb to remove any variables. Note, if you were running off manifold vacuum with the Edelbrock, you will likely need to adjust the timing since you'll be running port vacuum with the Qjet.
Reminder, port vacuum = no vacuum at idle. Manifold vacuum = vacuum all the time. It should run just fine with all ports on the carb plugged, at least for this debugging.