The seal has a lower wire circular clip to hold it on the valve-guide tower and a very fine tensioning spring for the valve-stem seal lip. Both came off in the process of removing the old seal. I wiped out the oil from the bucket-well to ensure there was no spring or clip or part there-of, hiding in the oil.. All accounted for.
Oiled the new seals and used a 3/8 drive 3/8” deep socket to push the seal home. Reassembly of the springs, keepers and buckets is simply in the reverse of the removal.
A small drop of grease on the inside of each cleaned keeper lets them stick to the valve stem. A small magnetized screwdriver was used to insert and position them. For some I could drop them in place with my fingers. If the grease was being squeezed out as the spring was being released then they were going into position.
I later chose to remove the center material of the brackets. Even in a brightly lit shop I relied on a small flashlight a lot. Being able to shine the light through that opening was handy.
To give you an idea of how worn my valve seals were: Using some standard drills I found the two that would give the same “feel of fit” in a new seal and an old.
New seals – 6.26mm dia.
Old seals – 7.63mm dia.
Oversize +1.3 mm. After 80,000 kilometers I guess they were due!
The 4 cam-cover rubbers (Original) had started to weep this year, just enough to have dust stick. They're fairly "firm" as you'd expect. For now I tried this: I put 1 wrap of Yellow (Heavy Duty Gas fitters) Teflon tape around them. I used an "Exacto"-blade to cross cut for the holes. I'll see if this keeps them dry. The cam-cover gasket had to be replaced in '83 when I stripped the bike for painting and plating. The original was stuck in too many spots to save. So the one I'm using is 34 yrs old and still keeping the top-end dry. When I originally installed it I put a thin film of oil on the HEAD-side. To this day it comes off the head cleanly, staying stuck to the cover. There are areas where there has been some slight gasket material transfer to the head - barely enough to feel. I've never tried to remove this ! As I said - It still keeps the top end dry. I ALWAYS torque the cover bolts but NEVER to the 11ft/lbs. the manual recommends. I use an inch/lbs. "click-type" torque-wrench torquing in two stages - 1st to about 30 inch lbs and then to 55 inch/lbs. The manual states 11 ft lbs (132 inch lbs -
www.kylesconverter.com) which (in my opinion) is either a misprint or simply getting too close to stripping the threads - at this age. (The bikes - not mine !)
My next goal is to see if I can fit a threaded O-ringed flat cap in the center of the stator cover so the 14mm rotor-bolt can be accessed to turn the crank-shaft without the need to drain the oil or have the bike inconveniently leaning on the side stand.