Well, I can't speak for how tight you're tightening them but when decently tight they shouldn't move. I rev my 450 high every time I ride it, and it uses the same exact design for valve adjusters. Mine don't move between adjustments and I thrash my bike, so yours shouldn't either.Ancientdad, yeah, my usual valve adjustment procedure is to leave the bike overnight so the engine is cold, then check intake valves with a .002in and .003in gauge, then exhaust with a .004in and .005 gauge, with the goal being the 2 and 4 slide through and the 3 and 5 don't (intake/exhaust respectively) - so if they both side through, I loosen the lock nut, adjust, then tighten the locknut, and check again. If neither slides at that point, I loosen the locknut, adjust, tighten, and try again, kinda going back and forth. So I'm always checking the valves after I've tightened the lock-nut good and firm. That was the case before I rode those 60mi, and they were in spec, and it was riding great.
I rechecked them post-60mi riding, and now the right exhaust valve was loose, the left exhaust was tight, and the left intake was loose. And it was riding great lol. Prior to replacing the left cam case cover, I'd check them every time I tinkered with the timing, maybe a dozen times over the past 500mi and they always seemed to hold spec, so not sure what happened this time around, maybe I didn't get the nuts tight enough, it sounds like you're saying heating/cooling cycles shouldn't be throwing it out of spec like that, so I'm not sure.
It's possible the advancer return springs are just a tad sloppy and allowing the points cam to rotate slightly under the tension of the points rubbing block (heel of the points where it rides on the points cam lobe), the timing shouldn't vary when rotating the engine back and forth during adjustment.Anyhow, I re-adjusted the valve clearances, rechecked the ignition timing and points gap, (the timing seems to wander sometimes a degree or so out of spec each time I check it with a test lamp statically or a strobe light dynamically, so I'm always nudging it a bit each direction).
Did you check the FSM for the value? I don't use a torque wrench on any part of the bike except engine assembly, the rest I do by feel after decades of tightening (and early on, occasionally breaking off) bolts. The shaft is hardened steel so the nut would probably strip before the end of the shaft broke off if you overdid it.Any thoughts on like, a torque spec for the valve adjuster nuts?
You should do the cam chain before any other tune-up operation, then valves, then points and timing. So yes, doing it cold is part of the complete routine. Are you setting the crankshaft to the position 90° past LT on compression stroke for proper adjustment? At that point all valves are virtually completely closed, so no undue tension on the cam chain so the adjuster will perform correctly.Also is it best to adjust cam chain with engine cold, or hot? Is there a way to verify that it's adjusted/in spec? I feel like I loosen and tighten the adjuster and get zero feedback, and just assume it's working![]()
Any slop in the points cam on the advancer shaft is to be considered, and should be minimal to (basically) none you can feel. Now, if there is wear on the points side cam bearing cover with respect to its fit with the camshaft bearing journal, and if that wear is enough that it allows the camshaft to rotate in both a circular fashion as well as a somewhat "orbital" fashion, then it will directly affect the points gap as it moves laterally and will make setting timing properly next to impossible.I'm wondering if the advancer/cam-lobe shaft wear/clearance is loose and that could be affecting points/timing consistency issues. Funny I added a shim for the end-play on it per that bizarre thread mentioned earlier and it was running great, and now it's running kinda rough again. Probably had no affect at all haha.
You'll get it sorted, just keep at it.

























































