Hi dreracecar - I’ll use an extreme example to illustrate: As I understand for Bill, he’s wanting to maintain a matching amount of fuel passing through his engine during the same time period using either a .037 or .040 nozzle.
Please picture an empty swimming pool, then filled with a garden hose and it takes 10 hours to fill. Now picture the same empty swimming pool, filled with a larger fire hose and you want it to take a similar 10 hours to fill. To accomplish, you would reduce the water flow pressure.
In Bill’s tune-up, with a larger .040 nozzle (firehose), you would decrease pressure to maintain the same volume of fuel moved through his engine with the .037 nozzle (water hose).
I’ll mention again what both you (dreracecar) and fuel749 suggested is what I would do first. Without knowing the status of your fuel pump, and if it’s just marginal doing the job, making a change could create other troubleshooting issues. It may work fine initially, and with a change push it beyond it’s capability and maybe you go lean.