Ha! That old humour thing . . . !
I only meant 'horrible' in the sense of £€$s Swarfy, with cam housings at £x and rings at £y and the result an empty bank account! A very excellent investment in fact, but not one a lot of folk want to make unless they are in really dire straits. And at the moment, new camrings are increasingly unobtainium, which isn't helping.
When I was talking about 'splitting the difference', I was simply referring to setting the ignition timing.
If a mag is say 2° off between cylinders on the camring, the actual firing points will be 4 crankshaft ° different between cylinders.
So all I meant was that
a) having established the amount of error by using a strobe on the engine or another good method, and
b) if not wanting to have to spend £150 odd to replace the bits . . .
then
c) instead of setting the timing by reference to one cylinder only now you know the other won't be that close, set it so that each side carries half the error.
Nothing to do with setting the camring or points or any of that. That side of it ought to be done as per Lucas etc. Sorry to have confused . . .
While a degree or so won't make much odds, especially with low compression motors like my own A, with HC pistons, alloy heads and other goodies, an unseen variation in timing is a common reason for pinking and rough low speed running. If one side is at a true 'per book' BTDC setting and t'other ends up 5 or 6° more advanced . . . or retarded . . . won't be a recipe for smooth. So although like everyone else I've spent half a lifetime with Rizlas between the points and shoving pencils down one plug 'ole only, it is so worth getting a degree disc on the crank and checking both sides with a strobe.
Because mags are old tech and a bit 'ramshackle' to use TT's phrase again, they don't stay 'perfect' like an electronic system should. Indeed, from new they probably weren't 'perfect'. They can be got close, but it can be a labour of love, and it can sometimes require the 'horrible' investment. The new CNC machined housings available are pretty good, and camrings I've had have been accurately machined - but even then we're working with a contact breaker with a few 'warts 'n all' features, and a tendency to wear.
I would say the hardest thing to get half-decent on a K2F is the firing interval, which is why I bang on about it.
BTH KC2s are more consistent in precision of construction in these areas, and rarely cause anything like the same hassle. But their pick-ups stick out at 90° to the body, which makes them a tricky fit on many machines . . . which is a shame frankly. 5T and 6T Triumph owners seem to get on with them very well, those who are lucky enough have that option.