Having run Peters Zagato for the past 25 years and had little trouble with the engine (bar a persistent slight rattle on light load,more later). The introduction of E5 has made misfiring on the overrun worse and now any early down changes at speed can result in a backfire! So having checked the ignition timing and distributor condition etc I can rule that out. So I decided to look at the valve timing. The results are a bit odd, measurements seem to be even at 10 degrees either side of the tdc Mark. Exhaust about 10 degrees early and inlet 10 degrees late. This is using a genuine British standard Manning feeler guage bought from the man himself. The camshaft marks line up at the on the inlet camshaft at tdc but are advanced at the on the exhaust which tallys with the measured timings on that cam. Consistent and checked several times, so nothing really rings true.I know Peter had some 'hot' cams fitted originally and found then too radical, I understood that he refitted standard cams. However on inspection those fitted appear too good to be true. No wear markings a I would expect more from old cams, maybe new/ reprofiled new cams were fitted about 30,000 miles ago? So does this ring any bells with anyone? Or can anyone remember what cams he did end up with. I certainly cannot , but I do remember the 'hot' cams with green paint marks (from memory) in the contents of the garage that I sorted out for Kim at the time. They may have been destined for the 1600 Zagato project that was ongoing at the time he died. I also wonder if the rattle on a light load at about 2-3000 rpm is actually valve/ piston contact. Though I doubt it would have lasted 25 years without getting worse! I always discounted valve timing as an issue, I suppose thinking Peter had set it up, but maybe it was done in haste? The fact that the exhaust timing is advanced would rule out chain stretch as if anything it was even more advanced back then. The late Peter Gerrish may have known, I think he was involved with the engine build. Anyway I am reluctant to set it to standard timing, check for interference then run it and cause any damage without checking first. Sadly cam timing has always been a 'black art' to myself, I find TV and radio transmitters are far easier to understand and tune up, each to their own! Any ideas?