So...I know I should've set the cam chain tensioner and checked the valve clearances back when I got my bike last year, but I didn't. The valves definitely are not too tight, maybe a tad loose, and the engine has been running ok, if slightly rattly at idle. So I hoped the chain tensioner would fix the noise at idle.
The chain tensioner should've been easy, right? Now I've read different methods of adjusting the "automatic" chain tensioner. [1] set #1 to TDC and loosen & tighten the locknut & bolt. (from internet gossip) [2] set #1 to 15 deg. past TDC, same. (from Clymer manual) [3] run the engine at around 1K rpm idle, loosen & tighten. (from alleged Honda factory manual reprint)
Well, so I tried method (2) because the idea of messing with it while the engine's running scared me. I heard and felt nothing, could not tell if that meant it was already perfect, or something in the mechanism is frozen, or what.
So then I started the engine up to try method (3). Initially, it sounded just as usual. But when I loosened the locknut and bolt on the tensioner, it *immediately* changed the sound. But not for the better. The rattley overtone sounds considerably sharper, more "metallic" now. Worrisome to my ear anyway. I tightened the bolt on the tensioner and the locknut, hoping they themselves were the source of the noise, but it wasn't.
Now I don't know how to interpret this. Maybe the tensioner *is* adjusted and I'm hearing the loose valves now because the chain is fettled? Or maybe the cam chain is looser because the spring is weak enough the idle method didn't work and I need to try method (2) above, again to get back to where I started. Or maybe the tensioner has failed, and there's nothing for it but to take *everything* apart.
The engine seems to run well otherwise, at least in neutral on the centerstand, it starts instantly, idles correctly, responds instantly to the throttle.
It has a little over 30K miles, for what that's worth.