Kawboy wrote: I'm looking at your 3 pic and I see UGLY. The nylon gear in that pic is part of the cam chain tensioner system and it's not suppose to have multiple teeth on the same tooth. The cam chain has been flopping around and it's cut the teeth. You need a new gear. Bad news is the head has to come off to replace. Good news is the gear is still available from Kawasaki at around $55 Canadian.Some members have opted for the aftermarket LISKA steel gear at around $110 U.S. I hesitate to use it because I'm hearing reports of noisy for the first 200 miles and then they quiet down. That suggests to me that something is wearing in and mating. Would that be the gear wearing in or the cam chain?
The tensioner looks like a modified stock tensioner. Some people have drilled a hole in the back end and tapped then inserted a LONG FULLY THREADED BOLT with a lock nut . Then manually adjust it and LOCK the bolt in its place. Yours looks like it just has a bolt in it, Where's the adjustment? I would suggest you search EBay for "KZ1300 tensioner" and you should find an APE tensioner for around $45 U.S. I prefer the manual one over the modified ZXR 1100 one. (to each his own)
Checking the valve clearance- If the cam lobe is pointed up then the base circle of the lobe is sitting over the valve bucket shim. At that point you can check the clearances with feeler gauges. I just prefer turning the crank over until I have the cam where I want it and check the clearance. The manual tell you to align the crank at 3 different points and then you can check a number of clearances at each point. I just prefer putting the cam where I want it and checking. I think it's easier.
Hope this helps, (sorry to see the nylon gear in bad shape)
KB
Sorry for the confusion regarding the multiple teeth on the same tooth. The profile of the tooth on the nylon gear should look exactly like the profile on the camshaft tooth only on a smaller diameter. Your teeth on your gear have had their faces shredded and now each tooth has 3 teeth ( hey Scotch, guess I should have been a dentist). Our member Brandonsmash posted a picture of his nylon gear just 4 days ago and it looked like this.
You need to do the gear, nylon or steel replacement, you need to do it and the head is coming off.
If you have a compression tester that has a hose that screws into the head and couples up with a hose with the gauge, you can take the hose and screw it into the head, set the crankshaft with that cylinder on top dead center and apply compressed air from an air compressor to the hose.
PLEAASE NOTE_ the engine can at any moment turn over so keep your fingers out of any possible moving parts!!! and listen for the air escaping from the carb (tight intake valve) from the exhaust (tight exhaust valve or bent valve, from the oil filler cap (bad piston rings) or bubbles in the rad (bad head gasket) It's nice to have the leak down tool for measuring the minor leaks and quantifying the results, but when you're looking for a gross leak, you can just rough it by doing this test. Then when you split the engine and repair, you know exactly where to look.
As far as mods go, it's difficult trying to get big numbers out of a long stroke engine. Your restrictions are limited by the size of the valves. Big bore engines have a lot more room for valves and will breathe better. The camshaft in this engine is fairly mild and some minor improvements can be seen with possibly a slightly more radical camshaft with maybe .375" lift and possibly 270 deg. duration. There's a company in California called Megacycle who will hard face your cam and regrind to a new profile. They show 3 profiles for the KZ13. There's a cost to doing a cam change like this and you'll end up giving up torque for more horsepower at a higher rpm, so for the average guy just out riding, I'd rather have the torque for passing in the same gear rather than having to downshift every time you want to get on it. As a stock engine, the KZ13 is pulling 100 hp per liter and that's really good for a long stroke engine. The Hayabusa is a big bore engine 81mm bore and 65mm stroke and s pulling 195 hp which is around 150 hp per liter. The problem is that the hayabusa pulls these numbers at 9800 - 10200 rpm where the KZ pulls the big numbers down at 6500 rpm (for torque)