
Looking for help and ideas from old hands please

I have an '82 1100G garage find that I'm restoring and I'm currently trying to figure out what's preventing it from running on anything more than one cylinder.
Here's what I've learned so far:
1. Good sparks and on time. HT leads connected to the correct cylinders.
2. Rock hard inlet rubbers, now replaced with new ones.
3. Mucky carbs, now clean and blown through with compressed air, 'O'rings replaced throughout and float levels checked.
4. Compression OK.
5. Valve clearances closed right up, my feelers only go down to 0.038mm and that won't fit under any of the cam lobes (Lobes positioned opposing each other). Specs say 0.03-0.08mm.
6. No airbox
The symptom I'm getting is, it'll start up, but only firing on number four cylinder. I'm surprised it'll even run like that!
Any pointers to what I should look at first? I was thinking carbs but now I've cleaned them up and I'm still getting the same result. When the motor runs the slides move up & down freely so I'm hoping they are all OK but maybe there's something I've missed (I'm not too familiar with carbs).
So now I'm thinking maybe valve clearances but I've had engines before that'll still run (badly) even with no clearance and it doesn't explain number four firing correctly when the rest don't. The compression test results in psi were as follows:
cyl#1 95
cyl#2 100
cyl#3 75
cyl#4 100
I'm taking a guess that the variation is down to the clearances.
It'd be great to get some fresh ideas here cos I'm just shooting in the dark

Thanks in advance!
GSon
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), the carbs and valve clearances are so closely linked you can't correct one without the other being done as well. I got my 850 running pretty good, then she took a dump again on the way home from my last long trip in Sept, 2010, wouldn't run good at all the last 800 or so miles. My valves had tightened up so much everything was thrown off. Also, another side note on the valve clearances. Let's say you measure them and have a couple that are real, real close to the minimum clearance. Don't leave them that way, get the next thinner shim in there, the bike will run much better for much longer.
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