It could be your bike is loading up from a too-rich pilot circuit, which will also mess up your idle big time no matter how you adjust the air or idle speed screws.
My bike's idle has always been an issue, but it's livable now. It varies up and down a bit but never stalls, even with the CR125 ignition and practically zero flywheel weight. With the stock flywheel, it was amazing to me how low it would idle and still run. If you think your points are iffy, replace them; you'll be glad you did.
I'm using a 48 pilot jet, 120 main, and (stock) 200 air jets, with the stock 271005 needle (in the middle #3 position) and stock 3.0 throttle slide. It took me a long time to find these values, as I tried every jet/needle/slide/air-screw combination I could think of. Once you have the 48 pilot jet in, turning the air screw out 3 turns (!) probably helped the idle problem and throttle response more than anything else, but you have to have the 48 pilot jet - the stock 52 pilot is way too rich for good idling and throttle response using modern premix ratios.
I also found part of the problem was the idle screw threads in the carb body, which were worn to some extent on all the carbs I have (six) - not only does the screw rock and change the slide height, I believe that air may leak past the threads as the screw tilts. I finally wrapped the threads with Teflon plumber's tape, this helped out quite a bit - just don't adjust the screw a lot afterwards if you can help it, try to find the idle setting quickly and then leave it. I also matched the angle of the end of the idle screw to the angle of the ramp in the throttle slide just for grins, but I'm not sure if this had much effect on the idle-speed problem; it did reduce the 'divots' that get banged into the throttle slide ramp and screw up your idle speed adjustment, though.
Thanks, Jim! Great suggestion about the WD-40, too.
Ray
_________________ '74 CR125M (175cc), '75 MR175, '82 RM250Z, '08 YZ250F, '14 Zero FX electric, '14 Zero MX electric, '18 Alta MXR electric
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