*shakes head* Should have gone with the DC carb.
And what is a DC carb? Is it something STC'd to replace the Marvel-designed carbs? Never heard of anything like that.
The Marvel carbs were built by Marvel, by Facet, by Precision Airmotive, and now by Marvel again, and by Volare (Tempest). Every one of them has managed to introduce defects of one sort or another resulting in numerous service bulletins and ADs. The whole design, even with no defects, is clunky, and they don't run as well as my ancient Bendix-Stromberg carb. In the 1990s an AD mandated the replacement of the two-piece venturi with a single-piece affair; the two-piece had a habit of working loose until it came free and got sucked into the engine. The alternative to the AD was to inspect that two-piece every 100 hours to make sure it was secure. The single-piece had flat-bottomed legs on it that disrupted the airflow through it, messing up the atomization and homogenization, so another AD was issued to change the fuel nozzle to fix that. In some airplanes the problem got worse, so yet another AD, or a revision, allowed one to reinstall the two-piece venturi and old nozzle and inspect it every 100 hours. But most of those old parts had been trashed.
Other ADs dealt with fuel bowl floats. Lots of problems there. Replacing the "obsolete" soldered brass float with plastic floats made of various polymers resulted in lots of problems with dissolving or sinking floats. The real reason was to save money, as the brass float was labor-intensive to make. Saving money no matter how much it cost.
So yeah, a completely new design to cover the various MA-3 and MA-4 models would be welcome, as long as it improves things and doesn't just introduce a new set of problems. I don't see that happening. There are too many models and settings, and the new carb would have to be a plug-and-play affair, complicating the redesign. Expensive. Owners are are already complaining about the cost of parts.