If it runs good, and the plugs are dark, leave it alone. Or carefully richer it up or lean it out and see if performance improves.
One important thing I have learned is that people's definition of running good varies widely. I have ridden skis that people say run great and in my opinion they run horrible. This is an online forum full of hacks with a select few knowledgable people who usually don't post. Their specs are a starting point, not an end all.
Take me for example. I have no clue what I'm talking about but I'm still talking. I usually just do my best to help and disclose my level of expierince on the subject.
Here are some of my stories...
I accepted specs from 2 reputable sources and stuck a piston because they are not right for application even though I had the same parts (freestyle vs racing).
Another time I stuck a piston because I trusted my mechanic and didn't check his tuning.
I almost lost a 3rd motor but I checked the work and saw the compression and tuning was not right. Fortuantly I finally found a builder that does good work and that 3rd motor is holding strong.
I've been tryin to set my x2 up, and my research has finally revealed that the people riding x2s have different performance expectations that I do. I'm trying to get my x2 to run as well as theirs and after riding some I've found out mine already runs better. Someone rode my x2 and was super impressed and my response to them was no way it runs like poop.
So, my point is, who cares what others are jetting or what theory you read online. Performance is an art individual to each setup. Lots of people claim to be Picasso but if you see ntheir canvas it's really just some stick figures and Ms that are suppose to be birds.