Stiffer springs on stock clutch plates make a big difference on the mid-Four bikes. The stock springs were pretty soft. Also, many had the "slanted" clutch plates, where the cork cut pattern is slanted, not square cut. These had slip built into them, for a smooth ride and gentle clutch release: the 500/550 were all about smoothness at the time, and they lacked the sheer mass of the 750 to provide it, so Honda got sort of inventive about it all: the 500 felt like it had a torque convertor if you tried to do a clutch-drop dragrace start! If you accidentally installed the slanted plates backward, the oil would not ever sling out of the plates through the grooves, and a even brand new clutch set would slip like crazy.
The Barnett springs, without their plates, worked superbly, though. The Barnett plates, at least up until the 1980s, were no so good for these bikes: they tended to lose filaments of clutch material into the oil, pump, and oil passages in the engine.
Strongperf: I don't know why the new clutch plates are 2.7mm. I just checked the 750 plates I have (same style, for the most part), and found the K7/K8 plates to be over 4mm thick, the K0-K6 style plates are 3.8 to 3.5mm thick. The Honda manual I have says 3.1mm is minimum thickness.