Hondaman
why do you need to adjust the intake and exhaust valves further than recommended ??, does the 5000 rpm produce some differences at that motor speed ?? does this let the engine breathe better or a bit tighter?? seems like operating both inlet and exhaust valves at at higher clearances, leaves less movement on the valve openings?? i'm not sure what this means as regards performance or the fuel question??
thanks for the information you are about to impart..
The extra clearance issues revolve around several things:
1. Wear of the rockers on their shafts. This causes a slight misalignment after about 10,000 miles or so that causes the rockers to open the valves erratically during the beginning of lift. This imparts a sideways moment to the valve stem, causing a slight bind and resulting cam load and vibration. Delaying the valve's opening by .001 or .002 inches "waits" while the slack in the rocker shaft area is removed, then the valve opens smoothly, like when it was younger. The lack of initial bind also reduces friction losses in the valve train, putting more of the power on the ground. It's a small amount, but measurable.
2. Temperatures of the valves. The longer dwell on their seats let them run cooler, especially when they are a less-than-perfect face fit.
3. Sealing time. When the valve sets against its seat a bit earlier with a worn guide, it has time to seal a little better before compression starts.
Technically speaking, increasing clearance reduces "valve open" time, and theoretic racers will say this reduces power. In practice, I've always seen quite the opposite. And, I learned it from Yoshimura, who I figured ought to know. When I built 16000 RPM (that's not a typo) versions of the "big four", we used .006" intakes and .008" exhausts!