I have a cam regrind on the way... Close to Std specs at about .300 lift and 10 degrees more duration.
I want it to idle well and not be all in the high end of the rev range. It's from Teigh Cams in QLD Australia. They do heaps of CB750 stuff more commonly, but this was a street CB550 cam that should work well. I bought some nice low km rockers that are fine to use without a "hardweld job" on this mild cam. I'm nearly ready to put this all together.
I thought that the rule of thumb was, if you have the hard weld cam (any regrind cam is hardwelded) you have to use hard weld rocker arms to eliminate any source of wear!
The hard weld rockers, it is my understanding will wear through the hardened faces of the stock rockers in not very many miles.
Whether that is very short in thousands (?) or 10s of thousands of mile, etc. (...?) I don’t know. I would love to know someone like Mike R’s opinion and vast experience w/CB SOHC4 motors the answers to questions of mixing them...be that a cam or rockers that have been hardwelded.
Be it with regards to using stock new rockers or low mileage rockers with a regrouped camshaft.
How soon are you likely to see the wear on the stock rockers?
What is a realistic number of miles before you are going to have to be in the motor again to address replacing the rockers. Wearing through that hardened coating of the rockers is. Not good for the tolerances of your bearings, etc.
I have always wondered... Is a hardened metal still going to be hardened when it is circulating in the motor after it has been put in suspension in your motor oil due to this increased wear?
SUMMARY or TAKE AWAY:
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Mixing the two will have you back inside the motor, and that is not in the distant future.