I too have the Edelbrock and am realitively happy with it. Someone correct me if I'm wrong but aren't the two mixture screws in the front only for idle to partial throttle? With that being said how are the remaining throttle positions tweaked?
OK, quickie Edelbrock 101.
The idle adustment, is adjusted by the screws on the front, you are correct.
After the throttle is opened, the mixture is controlled by vacuum. under the little covers, on the top of the carb. (the little tear shaped ones held on by one screw) is a piston, a spring, and a needle. At the end of the needle, is a jet. When the throttle is opened, the engine loses vacuum, and the piston, attached to the needle, rise. (this is adjusted by the spring tension) When they rise, they pull the needle out of the jet, wich feeds fuel into the engine. Once very low vacuum is reached, the piston rises all of the way out of the jet, and just the jet is metering fuel. (this is achieved, if the springs are the right tension, and the carb is the right CFm for the motors intake, right before the secondaries open) There are different needles and springs to adjust this process, and it can be very tricky, for ones just starting out on carbs, BUT, once you have master'd the mains on a edelbrock, nothing on a carb wil ever scare you again! LOL.
(This also is why people hate tuning Edlebrocks)
The secondaries, are really easy to tune, and are meter'd simply by the secondary jet, and the vacuum operated door. The door meters the air going thrue the secondary's, (creating a certain amount of vacuum) and feeds fuel simply by a siphon effect.
Basically, these types of carbs, meter fuel by monitoring the engines demand for fuel, through vacuum, and not from throttle position. (good for gas mileage!)
I would suggest getting a Edlebrock tuning book, and, the tuning kit for your carb, I think the kit # for yours is 1479.......(check to make sure, I just pulled it out of my head, LOL)
OK, I hope I made sense, and apoligize if I lost you.