Recently, I've read several posts where guys are having valve problems on CB750F and CB650. Here's a little history, and a fix for you, if it's not too late...
One of the "refinements" that Honda made to the CB750 engine ends up causing valve problems in the K5/F/late K engines. This problem can be easily fixed
by retuning. The story goes like this:
In the beginning, the engine was volumetrically designed for a straight-thru exhaust pipe (it was actually a glass-pack in K0 and K1) and a very open intake tract (4 sq. in. intake holes). This meant that the exhaust valve is larger, relative to the intake valve, than most of today's engines. (Some people would say "the intake valve was smaller"...). Later bikes had more restrictive intakes and exhausts, but the engine never changed. Only the spark advance curve was modified to a slower curve to compensate, and the carbs were typically rejetted with every model change to try to cope. Close, but not as perfect as the K0/K1 tuning.
The original exhaust valve guides were longer, tapered to the top, and had no seals (picture below, after I take it, from my early K2 head, which is really a leftover K1 head from Honda's production scheme). This length improved the heat transfer from the valve to the head for cooling.
About the time of the K2, Kawasaki came out with the 900-4. Its oil change interval was 1500-2000 miles, even with a wet sump engine. Honda, not to be outdone on the "low maintenance" image, magically changed their specs from the original 900-1000 miles to 1500 miles by reprinting the manual. Their engineers scrambled to make this happen without hurting reliability, and they did it by switching the longer exhaust valve guides to the same type as the intakes, and added that valve seal from the intakes to prevent the exhaust gases from entering the oil via the crankcase. (Later, the parts microfiches were changed to reflect these parts from the beginning, it seems...
.)
This is where the problem started. The intake guides are lots shorter and the seal makes the valve heat up more, to boot. The answer that we, the roadracers of the early 1970s, came up with was to increase the exhaust valve's lifter clearance to .004"-.005" up to 8500 RPM, and .006" to 10,000 RPM (stock = .003"). I raced mine at 10,000 to 12,000 RPM, using .006". This extra clearance lets the valve sit on the seat slightly longer, transferring a bit more heat into the head. Yes, it loses some cam duration, but on the exhaust side this doesn't hurt you like it does on the intake side.
Long term, like on a street/touring bike (or a 35-year-old bike), this translates into exhaust guides that gall and stick the valve. Then, one day the rider grabs a big handful of RPM and the piston taps the slow-moving valve and this breaks the guide. Hence, the "F" model (and CB650-4 model) problem with exhaust valves burning and guides breaking.
That's what happened at Honda. To fix your "F" (or CB650) to prevent this, run .004" exhaust valve clearances. On the CB650, make it .005".
I've kept this .004" on my K2, and 112,000+ miles can't be wrong: the guides are still nearly perfect, despite an early chip on one from a missed-shift 14,000 RPM trip.