If variability between cylinder performance in a vintage, diecast engine makes it "rotten," then yes, I think that is what we are doing with dynamic balancing/syncing of the carbs to compensate.
Thanks, Stockrider.
More than once I've performed a bench sync my way and was pleased wih the result.
With the other variabilities within spec (tappets and ignition), after I had hung in the carbs again, bike idled and 'picked-up'* fine. Nevertheless, I doublechecked by reading the underpressure, and differences proved to be within 2 cm Hg. Am I right to conclude that at that moment a compression test is redundant?
Now to another case. Let's call it B. Imagine you have just acquired a 50 years old CB500 and you don't know in what condition it is, let alone what PO's have done and what not. Again you have the ignition and tappets within spec. The difference is: you have
no intention to benchsync the carbs. Instead you connect the vac gauges rightaway and adjust the slides till you have the underpressures within 2 cm Hg. My question is: does the owner in example B now know as much as the owner in example A does and is a compression test equally redundant?
*Sorry, maybe I don't know the correct word in English.