Dan, thank you for advise on this.
The 0.3 - 0.4mm differences are between intake cams and there are similar differences between exhaust cams. I mean: intake cam 1 would have, say, 40.2mm, intake cam 2 would have 40.5mm, intake cam 3 would have 40.6mm, cam 4 would be 4.3mm and so on (I do not have the notes on me). That is what seemed quite a lot to me... yes, there was a difference on average between intake and exhaust cams - but I figured that is ok. But the difference between the cams of the same type seemed to be an issue.
I am not sure if I understand using the shims - if I grind cams, I increase the distance lobe - rocker. That to me probably indicates using the nominal thrust washer (4.5mm) and screwing out adjustment pin. If I raise the camshaft with a shim - I would increase the distance even more as the camshaft will go up... sorry - I have limited experience here. I was reading all your posts about the shims while doing my homework before posting the topic and I thought you use shims to compensate for ground valve seats (I wrote "valve nests" before, sorry, this was direct translation from my language) as the valve goes up after grinding.
I understand the point about grinding around the cam, thank you.
I wonder how much you can grind before you get to the end of the hardened material layer...?
Having studied the forum, I do use 15W40 mineral after engine repair, I was planning on switching now to synthetic 15W40. No idea what POs were using...
Just thinking - if I go for grinding as you say, I may as well go for a new camshaft - we have a camshaft guru here, who does all the racing teams and also he did the camshafts for half of Mecedes Benz club here... Price is ca $300. Maybe it is better option than struggling with the pits, etc. Not sure...