Nothing beats making your own tools. I looked for making the Common Motors set even more economical.
The first pic shows all tools involved. I have decided for a 5-valve aquarium air distributor (Superfish € 7,-) over the 4-valve set Common Motors offers, as I judged using that 5th valve much easier for in between bleeding than removing that cap at the end everytime.
When I travel, most of the depicted tools are in my tankbag anyway.
Those small brass adapters I had already machined back in the 80s. The gauge and the dampener I have used for checking my bench syncs, ever since I had donated my 4 EFKA gauge set to a yacht mechanic who had helped me with my diesel engine.
Now to the adjuster. The screwdriver always travels with me because it is much easier for eventual adjusting the air screws like when I ride at high altitudes (Alpes, Pyrenies, Dolomites) than the flat blade in the standard Honda toolset. For adjusting the sync, I have modified the screwdiver a little bit. In close up you will notice I've put some tube over its stem, so it fits nicely inside the 8X9 pipe wrench, with just enough play. The 8mm side of that pipe wrench is as well for fitting the brass adapters in the manifold vacuum ports as for the 8mm locknuts of the sync adjust screws. I have machined the cross drilled hole near the 9mm side of the pipe wrench, so I can now screw a 8mm bolt in it. For the time of adjusting, that bolt is my lever to slightly tight the adjuster locknut whenever I have adjusted the vacuum by a small increment. After the job, when I'm fully satisfied with the result in total, I will tighen those locknuts just a tad further by applying a 12 mm wrench (from the standard Honda tool set) to the 9mm end. If you look closely, you'll notice I have put a piece of tube there. It's to prevent the 12 mm wrench from sliding down the stem.