Not much to report. Followed zed1015 idea on cylinder studs that take a good soaking and normally go rusty within 3 seconds of seeing rain. First three coats with some Smoothrite then once dried on with the heatshrink.
Brilliant idea Rob

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The two M6 head bolt threads into the barrels felt pretty risky last time the head went on so I decided it was time to fit a thread insert to give a bit more meat. As with the cam chain tensioner which has been a serial leaker for ages so that needed the same treatment.
Borrowed pillar drill from work from so I could make sure of drilling the hole straight although this drill is a bit worn but definitely better than my wonky eye and a battery drill waving around in the air!
Using the trusty Helicoil set which I know is out performed by the Timeserts but I've already got the Helicoil set in my toolbox and as we have just found out that Mrs S is being made redundant in July every saved penny counts.
The only problem that I have come across with the Helicoil's is that the adjustable collar on the insertion tool doesn't fit in some counterbored holes, just like the ones on the barrels.
My solution was to turn some brass down to suit the counterbored hole and the insertion tool. Simples
Thought that I was done on the barrels untill I was running a tap through the inserts to make sure that they were clear of all the crap and on the last one the tap locked solid on the way out.
Half an hour of releasing oil, heat and coaxing it just would not budge either way untill that horrible little crack, and yep one broken tap

To say the air turned blue is an understatement of the largest proportion.
I had hoped that the tap would have shattered but no it had snapped level with the top of the thread insert down in the counterbored hole. As it was a spiral fluted tap there was no way that it could easily retreived. Gutted!
Lots of phoning around on Monday got me onto a small precision engineering shop on the outskirts of Southampton (Newman Stallard 02380 864291). Gave them a call and spoke to a really helpfull guy called Tom. Very knowledgable bloke who builds his own frames etc and is heavily into bikes/bike racing. Also has spark erosion gear in his garage at home and for £25 eroded the tap clean out of the hole without any issues
I've just got to sort the issue with the clutch basket now and I can start to rebuild the bottom end. My finish date of the end of April in readiness for the Ace Cafe is totally shattered now but I will get there in the end I suppose.