Honda's cams are/were all Parkerized when new: this polishes itself to meet the rocker feet. It looks like a soft grey coating on the lobe surface (actually it is on the whole surface, including the bearing areas). This is common with IC engine cams and crank journals: Ford began in the 1890s to use babbit bearings on rough Parkerized crank bearings (according to their book, "Ford: the first 100 years") to make them wear in to match each other, with a zero clearance at their beginning. This wore itself to become approximately 0.0010" clearance per inch of journal diameter, which over time became Detroit's go-to number for most engines. This wasn't ALL good: when the crank bearings later came out in polished form, they really needed less than this clearance to start out: Honda did exactly this when their multi-cylinder experimental racing bikes appeared, and this became the bottom end of the Honda 750 and their mini-cars by the mid-1960s designs.
In my long experiments with the 750 I have found that using, for example, 0.0004" to 0.0008" bearing clearance AFTER the engine has been run-in for a good time (maybe 10k miles or more) then causes the engine to be silky-smooth, quieter, and noticeably stronger.

And...removing the little 5mm bolts from the rocker shafts will allow the rockers and shafts to last much longer and there will be noticeably more torque at freeway speeds after the engine has heated up: normally this power melts away then, instead. The trade-off is: if you ride behind a fairing, there will be an increase in top-end noise reflected into your face from the slight ticking of the shafts in the rocker towers.