Dyno runs today, at HM Racing in Edenbridge.
Wasn't according to expectations, TBH.
I'd fitted some reground cams, with about 10 degrees more dwell and 1mm more lift than standard, which should have made a difference.
But they really didn't have much effect, lost a wee bit of torque in the midrange and gained a couple of BHP at the top end.
I'd expected that they'd take power to around 118-120 BHP, maybe with some loss of torque, though.
Here's the printouts: Through the top five gears-
And Horsepower/torque curves-
As you can see, another 2.5 or 3 BHP, but at the expense of torque lower down.
They suggest that I refit the standard cams and increase main jet sizes a little to fix the wobbly line in the second graph in the blue trace at about 4000-4500 revs.
That'll give smoother curves, and with almost no appreciable gain at the top end, I'd rather have good full fat torque curves, mostly because that's where I normally ride, 3-5000 on the road.
But I'll fit the ignition advancer and refit the longer intake trumpets on both cylinders first, to see if that makes a noticeable difference.
The only explanation I can come up with so far is that the rocker arms are not acting at efficient angles, as I had to fit thicker shims than normal to compensate for the lower cam base circles- you can't get reground cams to add 1mm of lift without removing 1mm of metal on the base circles.
It might be that with some playing about with the cam timing I might get a bit more, slotting the cam sprockets is simple enough, but it would have to be trial and error, and these dyno runs keep costing me money.
It seems that something is holding the engine back form developing the power increase that the cam profiles should have been able to deliver, possibly a full system is needed, maybe airbox mods would help, suggestions on a postcard please.....

It's not falling off, it's an upgrade opportunity.