I do use a sequence of pulling the choke as part of the shut down procedure for old Ford 4000 gas tractor when it is going to be stored and not used for a long time..
Before stopping the engine I shut off the fuel supply valve to the carburetor.. and then run the engine at a high speed to burn the remaining gas out of the carburetor float bowl and passages in the carburetor. Just as the engine begins to miss from running out of gas I pull the choke full on hopefully so manifold vaccum from the engine still turning will help suck any residual gasoline out of fuel bowl & passages inside the carburetor so the engine goes into storage with no gasoline left in the carburetor.
Since I've been doing this (over several decades) I've had no more problems with carburetor gum up during long storage periods.
You can read about a somewhat similar practice (with many stated reasons for doing so) with piston aviation engines (run the engine up off idle to a high rpm then putting the fuel (tank) selector valve to the off position, putting the mixture control to the idle cutoff position, to cut fuel to stop the engine and finally turning the magnetos to the off position). Reasons I've read range from ensuring no residual fuel remaining in a cylinder or no residual fuel in the carburetor, to trying to ensure on dry sump engines, as little oil as possible is left in the dry sump.. Both of these are important factors on radial engines where bottom cylinders can hydro-lock from excessive oil leaking during storage down through the piston rings into the combustion chamber. Typically they have to be hand propped before starting to ensure no cylinder is hydrolocked with oil. And if hand propping, for safety reasons you don't want the possibility of any gasoline in the carburetor or cylinder, even though you know the the mags are off.
So far as the backfiring mentioned above, the larger P&W Cyclone multi-row radial engines especially, are primed and started with pretty excessively rich fuel mixture to prevent a backfire. Reason being the intake manifolding of these engine are rather complex, made of aluminum tubing and clamped joints.. A backfire can be strong enough to blow the manifold piping apart and start an engine fire.
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