If you have the 6 normal plates and a wide-tab slipper plate, and the top fingers fit within the basket's edges (not sitting above the basket), then it will work. You probably then have the thinner plates (0.136" thick) that we are seeing today. The top plate, if not a slipper plate, will be similar in thickness to the others. I just bought a collection of such plates from PartsNmore and installed them in a late-model K6, which has the same clutch as yours: I replaced the top slipper plate with a normal plate and the total stack came out to be 0.38" less than with the original plates (minus the slipper plate), so it will work out OK.
Honda's plates (like 22201-371-000) used to be a little over 0.142" thick and their slipper plate (22202-391-000) was almost 0.157" thick. When combined with the dual-sprung plate, there was only room for a total of 6 plates. After the dual-sprung plates were replaced (as most are) with a simple steel plate, it becomes a 7-plate clutch again, like the K2 post 2/72 thru K6 bikes, with the non-reinforced center hub (injection-molded cast body).
These variances cause LOTS of confusion in these bikes today! So much so that I ended up with my CB350F as 'payment' from a finally-happy, but [formerly] very frustrated Vet who had been ripped off by 3 shops in a row, each one changing his clutch plates (even though the last one just did), even changing his basket, hub center, and finally the clutch cover (outside), all to still have no clutch, or barely enough to make the bike run up to 25 MPH in any given gear, that was all it would do. I found 7 friction plates in the end, all slant-cut type of 0.157" thickness, a much-modified hub (ground out to fit the clutch plate fingers), and the plates installed backward, so the oil would never leave the plates. And, the clutch cover was from a K4 bike, so the spacing to the lifter was too tight and could not be adjusted far enough to let the clutch fully close. All it needed was 6 plates and the Gold Wing thicker one, or 7 plates with the top one properly oriented (slipper type), and an "F"clutch cover. Poor guy...