I am thinking probably not such a good idea. You will more than likely have too much slop in the complete assembly. Not allowing you good transition, accurate settings and good operation. Have you removed the spring on your carb butterfly? I remove all mine to eliminate any extra stress on the servo. So far, no failed throttle servos.
Being my first gasser and not realising that these motors vibrate so much, I initially set up the servo travel with no play. I should have given these setups some play at full throttle and no choke positions. That is why the servos motors burnt out.
By using powerful servos with metal gear we are just ensuring, by brut FORCE, that the required settings get across to the carburetor. In fact, both butterflies of the carburetor are oscillating like mad as we do it right now. So there is no real precision in their setting. There is just an average setting.
There has to be a way of eliminating the vibrations with some form of shock absorbing device. There are plenty of such devices in cars, boats and fun size planes. Without them everything would vibrate and fall apart quickly.
A monofilament metal cable and teflon sleeve (with little or no play between the cable and the sleeve) looped over itself could eliminate the vibrations between both ends.
The thing is to find such a cable and a way to attach the sleeve at both ends.