Rebuilding a quadrajet is a lot more work than ordering as new small engine carb off Amazon for $20-30
I have yet to “scrap” a single machine from NLA issues. Parts are easy to source if you know how and where to look
Got tired of running up to Autozone working on my daughter’s cars. Bought a cheap, last generation Autel unit for $30 off ebay couple years ago. For whatever reason still able to download updates to the unit.
Once you've done the Q-jet it really isn't hard, taking off the air horn is a bit tricky but again your second rebuild will take half the time of the first.
Yes you can get aftermarket carbs from Amazon....but do they work?
What I do with all my small engines that have a float bowl type carb is install a fuel shut off valve if it doesn't have one. This makes it easy to remove the bowl to drain out the gas without making a big mess. My other machines all 2 strokes that have the little cube diaphragm style carbs I just start up every 2-3 months. I know I should run them out of fuel but this method works pretty well.
NLA parts is a big problem on older vehicles like my 2 Jeeps. Ebay and Car-part are the only sources for some items, most of the domestic car companies start making parts NLA about 10 years after the model has ended production.
The only reason I am thinking of replacing my '07 Grand Cherokee, is that. Critical parts like engine ECMs, cat converters, etc are just NLA.
The Autel unit I got last year reads ALL codes, engine, body, ABS. I was able to repair non-working headlights on the passenger side on the '07 just by running the codes. Canbus is very complex, these scanners are a must if you want to actually fix anything. Oh and the cause was a bad ground path, just added an extra ground wire to the harness on that side and that fixed it.
When the ground path is interrupted, Canbus turns off the positive side, so you don't really know what the cause is without a scanner.