fatboy wrote:I agree with Aladin, sounds like you may have a slightly bent valve stem
I think if I was in your shoes I would have the head off, check the valve and guide and if there has been valve/piston contact make sure there is not a tiny piece of piston crown swarf lurking
If the valve stem is bent, the motor may be ok at low rpm but things could get interesting at higher temp and rpm. Abent stem will also wear the guide quicktime leading to oil burning
Head off is more time, money,hassle but a lot less hassle than a potentially destroyed piston, head ect
Be interesting to know if later cams fit
Good luck with it
Tore into it tonight - results are not appealing - It appears that the exhaust cam has/had siezed in its bearings - When I tried to start it either it was already siezed or the bearing was starved of oil and the bearing nipped up - there is a 5mm wide band all the way around the cam and bearing where it looks like metal has transferred.
In comparison the replacement cam I have from a 2nd hand cylinder head rotates freely in its original head, but feels really 'tight' when placed into the existing head - this is without the cam cap being fitted.
I think the cam bearings are FUBAR-ed so It looks like a head swap.
How easy is this? anyone done it? Can it be done insitu? or do you need to drop the motor. any special tools? - at the minimun it looks like I'll need a crows foot adapter to torque 2 of the cylinder head bolts
Feeling depressed now......
