It was pouring yesterday, so I fell to work on installing the 14 mm spacer/gaskets (and while hood was up, reconnected the crankcase vent tubes). Just finished this morning, and I'm about to take the car on a test run to the library.
Anywho, most of you will recall one of my first posts was about hard starting issues. This issue plagued us off and on, usually when the weather was hot, the drive kinda short, and the waiting period between starts even shorter (think hot parking lot and a 10 minute dash into the store). One of the replies last summer suggested a spacer, to thermally decouple the carb (and float bowl) from the heat of the engine. As I was removing the air cleaner yesterday, I noticed the carb....moved. Once the cleaner was off, I discovered that all 4 carb nuts were so loose I could turn them with the edge of my index finger! And, considering the location of the nuts, I could sorta understand why: only one of them is easily reachable, and the rest are major PITA's to access with even 1/4 inch drive sockets and short wrenches. Lots of patient tweaking and small movements eventually got the nuts off, new carb studs and spacer installed, and carb tightened back down. Fired up immediately, with none of the stumble I'd become accustomed to. So, recommendation: for anyone who
just acquired a carbed 124 from a PO, and there's starting/ running issues, check to make sure the carb is bolted down tight! Yeah, no duh, but who'd a thunk??

All you experienced Fiatistas already have correctly tightened carbs....
In case anyone else is considering the 14 mm spacer, you will need metric studs in the size of 8mm-1.25 pitch x 50mm. These "just fit", but the longer 60mm's come to close to the carb body to allow one to tighten the nuts.
Next project: fuel pump, followed by H-4's and relays. Followed (maybe) by 95amp alternator if the budget allows.....
Neil