Cams are a special case. You don't really know just what their angular rotation is going to be when they are built, and they are free to rotate on the camshaft. Sometimes, when you have assembled the engine, and turned the crankshaft/piston to exactly where it should be, if there were only one grubscrew in the cam, it would be in a position that is impossible to reach with a wrench to tighten it up. So---You put in four grubscrews at 90 degrees apart, so that at least one will always be accessible by your wrench. In a perfect world, you would remove the other three grubscrews then, and depend on the one that was left to secure the cam in position. However, the world is not perfect, and I know very well that one grubscrew is going to slip and the cam will probably move under running conditions. So, as a consequence of this turning, I leave the other three grubscrews in place and tighten them as well. All in all, with two cams per cylinder, and the fact that you never quite get the damn cam in the right place the first two times you set it, this counts for a lot of wear and tear on the end of the Allen wrench. A #6 grubscrew takes a 1/16" Allen wrench which is very small. Of course, when the edges near the end of the wrench get rounded over from use, you can always grind some off on the big belt sander to expose new crisp, unworn edges on the wrench. My 1/16" Bondhus Allen wrenches are completely worn out by the time I finish one engine. My solution is going to be either a much, much better grade of Allen wrench, or else any new designs will allow for either a #10 grubscrew or a #8 socket head capscrew--not because I need that holding power, but because they both take larger Allen wrenches that won't wear off their corners so quickly.