But… I suppose I should have paid more attention to potential foibles and pitfalls. The old rule of assume nothing applies, and any time you are grafting on anything other than the original parts you can run into the unexpected.
In this case it turned out to be the cam chain guides. They're a different part number, and I should have checked that. The good news is that the cam chain is the same 120 links, but you'd think it was different because it's tight to fit. The tensioner protrudes almost too far even when fully retracted so the knob doesn't really spin into adjustment. There's plenty of travel left in the guide though, so I decided to make a spacer out of extra thick gasket material and that gave me some movement.
It runs just fine. There may be some downside to not running the original guides, but the front looks almost identical although it's a different part number and easily changed. The slack side is more problematic as it's a split the cases proposition. The GSX 400 part is no longer available.
I'm going to machine a proper spacer about 3mm thick which should put the CCT in a more normal part of its stroke. As it is, the chain seems a bit whirry - but I'm not too whirried about it. I have another motor that I'll redo as well, and just split the cases and do bearings and a new guide. This one was just intended as a learning experience and to be a spare.
Despite the [slightly] used rings, the motor is tight and crisp and the rings seem to have seated right away. It has more low end grunt than the 4 valve, especially below 4K and pulls 6th up the local 'dyno hill' whereas the 400 petered out without a downshift. I haven't tested above 7500 yet, but I have a feeling that the frantic top end rush of the Twin Swirl will be more sedate like the old two valve 400s.
I don't think that I'll miss the GSX version. If I wanted a high revver I'd find a 400 Bandit.
If I don't reply, I'm out there breaking it in. Or blowing it up….
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