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I apologize if this question has been asked before. I could pull out my service manual and look it up, but sometimes owners / mechanics discover better repair ideas often overlooked by service manuals.
On the CB1100, do the camshaft drive gears need to be removed to allow removal of the camshafts, or can the camshaft drive chain be loosened, and slipped off without removing the gear(s)?
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03-19-2026, 11:27 AM
(This post was last modified: 03-19-2026, 11:36 AM by Sadorphan.)
(03-16-2026, 11:18 AM)dave Wrote: I apologize if this question has been asked before. I could pull out my service manual and look it up, but sometimes owners / mechanics discover better repair ideas often overlooked by service manuals.
On the CB1100, do the camshaft drive gears need to be removed to allow removal of the camshafts, or can the camshaft drive chain be loosened, and slipped off without removing the gear(s)?
I recommend just leaving the valves alone, the cb1100 valve train was based off a cbr1000rr engine from the early 2000's. The valve train from that bike is extremely similar to the cb1100, but the cb1100 has a far lower redline because its air cooled (also has different valves, guides, and retainers but overall design and metallurgy is same as their race bikes). There is a forum member who had 175,000 miles on his cb1100 and never adjusted or checked the valves. There are plenty sub 100k miles with 0 issues. If you aren't having issues starting or really off fuel consumption, then there is no reason to be doing the adjustment. I have called multiple professional mechanics and all told me that it really is not worth adjusting, every single cb1100 they have checked had been to spec. The valve train is extremely overbuilt for the tune and rpms, and will likely never fall out of adjustment.
If you are having issues starting there is a number of electrical issues, that would also be a culprit. Faulty stator, faulty battery, Faulty wiring somewhere, faulty starter, faulty ecu, etc. There is a ton of simple fixes that might actually be causing your starter issues, Valves would be the last place I would check.
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03-20-2026, 07:17 AM
(This post was last modified: 03-20-2026, 07:47 AM by peterbaron.)
Thank you for your opinion...but that's
not what dave asked for:
"On the CB1100, do the camshaft drive gears need to be removed to allow removal of the camshafts, or can the camshaft drive chain be loosened, and slipped off without removing the gear(s)?"
Dave, here is what may? answer your question, old forum:
http://cb1100forum.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=15893
"Drop a gear and disappear"®
'24 Kawi Z650RS - Hooligan®
'14 CB1100 DLX, s/n 170, 38K kms - FOX®
'14 CB1100/ABS, 134K kms - sold
'13 CB1100/c-ABS - 56K kms - sold
*Grand Chancellor*
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Thanks PB. I printed that writeup out and adding it to my service manual. Lots of good info.
'84 Honda Magna VF700
'06 Yamaha VStar Classic 1100
'14 Honda CB1100 Std
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(03-20-2026, 07:17 AM)peterbaron Wrote: Thank you for your opinion...but that's not what dave asked for:
"On the CB1100, do the camshaft drive gears need to be removed to allow removal of the camshafts, or can the camshaft drive chain be loosened, and slipped off without removing the gear(s)?"
Dave, here is what may? answer your question, old forum:
http://cb1100forum.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=15893
Thank you very much Peter, exactly what I was looking for.
There is no reason to remove the sprocket on the exhaust cam, ever. Leave it on. The intake sprocket has to come off to remove the cams because Honda didn't see fit to make the timing chain one link longer so the cams could come out whole after taking the chain tension off. Huh This leads to a lot of frustration when re-installing and trying to line everything up for proper timing. Anyway, you don't need to remove the exhaust sprocket.
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03-21-2026, 04:49 PM
(This post was last modified: 03-21-2026, 04:55 PM by Cormanus.)
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