bgsengine wrote:If you get gas coming through the main nozzle in the venturi by using the purge bulb, something definitely ain't right, and line hookups will have nothing to do with that. The high speed check valve in those carburetors is the final point which fuel can reach un-aided. Do a teardown of enough of these carburetors, and really look at the check valves and how they work, it's easy to see. Now, if the check valve is bad, then, YES it is easily possible for the situation you describe, (and a backwards check valve is a bad check valve) - But otherwise, no.
I think your overlooking something here. Now if this was a cube with a built in primer then operation is different as all the check valves are in the cube but this is two piece system where the priming system check valves are separate. The separate primer has two check valves in it and this carburetor has no check valves in the discharge port going to the primer to prevent backwards flow. The main nozzle does contains a check valve. Now with the primer lines reverse and fuel is fed into to the discharge port it will pressurize in the diaphragm chamber. Now think of the main nozzle as an one way side street. Since the fuel mix can not go back though the needle valve (check valve) which would closed it has no choice but to open the main nozzle check valve and push into the throat of the carburetor. In this configuration as the fuel expands fuel will leak out of the carburetor. Engine can be started and run a short time until fuel in the carburetor and primer line is used up. With the carburetor leaking sometimes there will excess fuel mix in the crankcase that would also be available to burn.