We have a '81 650GX Katana.
It was bought as a complete dog, that had been sat in a barn somewhere for years and has been restored over the previous 13 months.
I'm a bit of a virgin when it comes to buckets & shims - I cut my teeth on rockers and hydraulic lifters.
When we got it, it seemed very low on power - ie try to pull away and it would try and die. Rev it and slip the clutch, and you could just about get it to move. This I put down to blocked jets (turned out only the pilot jets were blocked). On having the engine apart, I gave the shims and cams a visual check over, and all looked good (no wear apparent on either). I couldn't check the clearances at the time, as my feeler guages were out on loan. And yes, I kept the buckets/shims in the correct order when I took it apart and rebuilt it!
Fast forward to now - The engine has been rebuilt, carbs stripped and cleaned, new air filter etc etc. The top end sounds very tappity (I'm aware of the timing chain noise on these), and the power delivery is the same as when we first got it home, pre strip down.
The book says the tappet clearance should be 0.03-0.05mm.
The lowest my feeler guages will go, is 0.038mm and when I try to slide it between the back of the cam lobe and the shim, it won't even go through the gap. On all 8!
I'm just wondering if somebody, somewhere in time has re shimmed it with the wrong shims, and that was one of the reasons for the previous owner getting rid of it, as according to the title document (V5 in the UK) he only had it a few months before selling to us.
The manual says that if the clearance is too tight, it will result in loss of power... Do you think that's what is happening here?
Thanks,
James
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