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I have a lot of components removed from trusty rusty at the moment, and decided that before I close up, I should check the chain stretch. What a surprise I got. Have a look at the front cam bearing tower of the left head - someone in the past found that the timing mark didn't line up, and ground it off, and scribed a new mark. 
So obviously I couldn't check chain stretch by the quick method of lining up the marks. I used the valve lift method, and found that :
The left cam is 8 degrees late (8 degrees on the LEFT cam - this chain is seriously stretched!)
The right cam is 2 degrees early - now to me this means the stretch is really 16 degrees, but the cam has been advanced by one tooth (18 degrees).

For comparison to see how that cam tower should look, I'll borrow one of styrias latest pics :

So obviously I couldn't check chain stretch by the quick method of lining up the marks. I used the valve lift method, and found that :
The left cam is 8 degrees late (8 degrees on the LEFT cam - this chain is seriously stretched!)
The right cam is 2 degrees early - now to me this means the stretch is really 16 degrees, but the cam has been advanced by one tooth (18 degrees).

For comparison to see how that cam tower should look, I'll borrow one of styrias latest pics :
