Even using a drill bit with your fingers will enlarge the orifice.
Drill bits are hardened steel. Jets are soft brass. Not a good match.
slomo
Total and utter crap
Get a # 65 micro drill and try to cut a B &S jet biger
If you press hard enough you will get 1/2 turn in and the drill will jamb and most likely break.
And you can drill a hole through brass with a wooden stick and some sand if you try for long enough.
If the debris in the jet is hard, then forcing it through with any blunt object can and will cause the debris to score the sides of the jet which is just as much trouble as enlargement or obstruction.
The idea behind twisted wire jet cleaners and cleaning with jet drills is to break away the debris then transport it down the tool through the flutes.
In order to CUT you have to have a CUTTING EDGE and that EDGE has to be SHARP.
Carbide is harder than wood and steel but try to push a masonary drill into a lump of steel, wood or even brass and all you are going to do is make a mess burn the wood and melt the brass .
Having tuned carburettored engine for better than 50 years I can saftely say you are talking trash
Firstly fishing line is fine for pushing rust or fine dust through a jet
But it will not shift varnish or corrosion debris
To cut a jet with an undersized jet drill is next to impossible unless you put it into some sort of machine
Jet drills are high strength boron steel very similar to a mower blade and quite flexible
They will follow the easiest path which will always be what is obstructing the hole, not the jet unless the drill has a bigger diameter than the hole in the jet.
Brass is not marshmello
Welding tip cleaners are FILES and they are designed to remove tiny bits of metal that have been blown back up the pipe & welded onto/ into the copper, corrosion debris that has melted into the copper , carbon deposits that have alloyed with the copper and fluxes that have solidified .
While they can be used to clean carb jets with they can & do enlarge the jets, particularly in the hands of people without the fine motor skills in their hands developed from years of carefully cleaning a jet.
Brass is used to make jets for one and only one reason
It machines very cleanly with the correct tooling so the sides of the hole are smooth enough not to cause interfearence with the flow of whatever is being metered through it.
BAck in the old days they used bronze and bronze requires honing to get the same surface finish even when machined fully submerged
So for the average mug at home then a set of micro drills is more than good enough provided they start with a small one then work their way up .
Your chances of cutting the jet bigger with a drill bit between your forfinger & thumb is a long way less than zerro where as the chances of distorting or enlarging the hole using a file is quite high
If you want to enlarge the jet in a controlled way then jet drills are the go