Great to see your progress, Pete! Sounds like the new injectors should make a big difference, if the old ones have wet tips... Sounds like they are slowly leaking due to the residual pressure in the feed lines.
Regarding the charcoal canister cap - I just bought one from Autoricambi that they had laying around (because I had read that it's a metered orifice), and I can confidently say that it is NOT a "metered orifice" as has been claimed on the forum. It is strictly to prevent water from entering the canister. It's just a little plastic umbrella cap with PLENTY of open airflow around and underneath it. I'm a mechanical engineer and Fluids class isn't TOO far back in my memory, and this cap certainly wasn't designed by anyone intending it to meter airflow. So, don't worry about it. When I get some free time over here I'll 3D print a bunch of copies of it and make those available to the forum.
I am curious about refreshing an old charcoal canister, though. How do you plan to do that?
You can test to see if your AAV is closing fully by leaving it hooked up to a 12V battery for a few minutes. You probably knew that. It'll close slower than it does on a running engine, but at least mine closed fully with only 12V power. Not sure if that's normal or not.
The CSI malfunction that micbrody mentions is a great idea. But I wouldn't look at the CSI - I'd look at the thermo-time sensor temperature sensor that signals it to open. If the injector were stuck open, you'd be getting fuel from it all the time, because it always has fuel pressure - not good, and doesn't sound like that's happening to you. If the thermo-time sensor is faulty, I think you'd get symptoms more like you're describing. But I'm still learning this stuff. Should be very easy to test: just unplug the electrical connector from the CSI after you've warmed the engine, then stop it and try to restart, see if it starts up better. If it does, then I'd say the thermo-time sensor is bad.
Lastly, as you know I've been fighting similar idle issues on an FI motor. My AFM had definitely been monkeyed with by a PO (plug on emissions screw was missing), and my resistances were a bit wonky. I had read many things about bending arm contacts, adjusting spring tension, setting screw via O2 sensor voltage, etc etc. I ended up deciding that for $250 + shipping, I'd rather have a professional rebuild it with new parts, not just bent springs. So I sent it to the folks at
www.fuelinjectioncorp.com, and it returned yesterday looking like a brand new part. I'm happy to say that it solved the remainder of my idle issues, and it feels like a new car now. So, something to think about if you've exhausted other options! In the grand scheme of things, it was money VERY well spent...
Actually, one more thing - did you install those throttle shaft seals I sent? Curious to hear if they made any improvement!