So the first one was a 81 GS450E, good little bike. I adjusted the tensioner like I described before, and it worked fine for a few months. Then I went on a long trip down the highway, it slowly started making a really loud slapping noise from the valve train, which eventually got really bad and I lost most power and had to pull over to the left side of the road. I went to get a pickup truck, but by the time I got back the California Highway Patrol had towed my bike (I was gone for like 1.5 hours!). I thought that the exhaust valves were all burned up and bent because that bike had the shims and I never got around to adjusting them, even though I knew it needed it. I didn't think my towing bill was worth a destroyed motorcycle, so I let the tow company keep it.
Next bike was an 82 GS750 (I think it was e too, but not sure). One of the first things I did when I got it was adjust the valves (I did that right) and adjust the cam chain tensioner (I did that the wrong way as described above). This morning I again had to make a particularly long trip on a few highways, and when I was about 10 miles from home I heard the cam chain getting really loose (it sounded like the cam chain to me). I tried to limp it home, but it didn't make it. The sound was really loud, and I had very little power. Now I'm waiting for my friend with a pickup truck to get off work so I can get my bike off the side of the road and into the garage.
I now know how to properly inspect/set up the automatic cam chain tensioner. My question is this:
What did this improper maintenance do to my bike? Is it bad enough that I should go find another $500 GS and part this out on e-bay? I know the cam chain isn't broke, because it ran even after I pulled it over. I'm hoping (and praying [-o<) that I can just put a new tensioner on it, and it'll be fine.
Thanks.
-Jon
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