I had to remove oilpump and prime it again on my CB750 K2.
(Pump had been taken apart so it was really dry when I primed it first time, but not good enough.)
Real good this time releasing the air inside that block the oil flow.
I had it in a plastic container covering the pump completely.
Block one of the holes ( oil hose holes) with thumb. Rotate the sprocket in that direction you will feel it create underpressure to thumb.
I had to open the pressure relieve valve (14mm nut) to let blocking air out. The other side of pump too. 2 bolts.
It bubbled when rotating the sprocket.
Do the same with other hole blocking with thumb. Now rotate in the other direction. When you no longer see any bubbles, tighten the 14mm nut.
Tighten it a little harder when pump is installed.
Not too hard, it is very thin and not as a nut/bolt that usually use 14mm wrench.
Continue to rotate and thumb will be sucked into pump rather hard. Then you know it is OK.
I removed pipe 3 and 4 of my 4-4 to get space to remove oilpan.
Then access the pump, remove it no problems.
Prime it and assemble the pump.
My bike was parked on sidestand. I used my telephone selfie cam to see better. Laid down on my back...
Later same excersize on another CB750 when it got a rebuilt pump with new rotors.
All air must be out.
Be careful when assemble the pump. It must go on parallel to case to not harm the fragile knock pins, the 3 thin metal pipes with o-rings.
Really easy to dent them unusable and order new.
I have ordered several extra as spares after that experience
My build had assembly lube on crank bearings and cam so I had lube enough to spin starter longer.
No plugs in to let it spin quick and less pressure on rods and crank.
I think a thinner oil should be easier for priming.
With no air inside no problems with 20W-50 as my bike gets.