Greg FWIW, here is my take on Sunny's (and my) 650's jetting.
I have been reading all I can on the 650 since I bought it.See if this jives w/ your tuning experience.
There are limits to a carbs ablities.
If we only want to prevent bluing then a slightly rich mixture is what we want.
Any carbureted single likes more jet as you "uncork" it, and a single is more finicky about it's mixture as you uncork the system. They need to be richer w/ less restriction and some carbs may need more tuning to adjust for an open pipe like her Jardine.
Now examine that Jason's bike ran best with no jet change and a Supertrapp, confirming that a good carb will self adjust for air density. - More air pulls more fuel.
In addition, the Supertrapp will give some backpressure, but is a significant improvement to the stock pipe. I have read some carbs run better w/ the Supertrapp vs. an open pipe, particularly singles. The Mikuni is quite tunable so it will take some trials to find what you need, if you want to improve performance.
My Pro-stock friends all know some carbs work better than others, they will test many of the same type to find one set of "good ones", as they are looking for that last 1 Hp. That is not to say they never change jets. They change everything ...ALOT!
So how do you know?
Well a dyno is good, so is a time slip or a lap time.
Jason's dyno runs do not mention a better air filter, he hints at a dealer adjustment, heck his stock filter may have been dirty causing the carb to go richer, who knows?
In addition, I suspect his new Supertrapp uncorked his awful factory restriction and his stock 650 and Mikuni w/ the stock jet just ran better due to only that. His Mikuni didn't like the bigger jet as the Supertrapp, I suspect, is shipped to make his *stock* carb happy. One report has good results with only the spacer mod.
Makes sense to me if you have seen the inside of the factory pipe. It's awful. That is why they 'hiss' as much as they 'putt-putt'.
Carb tuning is trial and error.
Your jet numbers are right for your set-up and give us good place to start.
Sunny, Greg has "uncorked both ends of his system, 1st the intake is shorter and the K& N "pod" should be less restrictive and straightens out the air better than even a replacement K&N in our stock intakes.
I suspect that would tend to lean the mixture, more than the Supertrapp.
Second, you have a Raask straight pipe so it makes sense it is now at a 152 jet and going higher.
Sounds like you are leaner w/ a 152 and fatter (rich) w/ a 160 jet by 'seat of the pants' testing.
I would be curious to see a time slip or dyno runs w/ the Raask in current tune vs. your 10 disc Supertrapp installed and the Mikuni and re-tuned.
Sunny’s Jardine is an open ended pipe so with no other mods my guess says start w/ a 150 vs. the stock 145.
This may be a little rich, but should help with backfires and bluing. Now if she is at high altitude, she may need to lean that set up.
There is more tuning help on the Mikuni web site.
Literally, "your mileage may vary".
I bet a dollar to a donut Jason's pipe is very colorful now.
Here's his dyno chart-
http://www.thumperpage.com/articles/ls650exh.htmlSorry about he tirade, I just needed to plan my own tuneup.