Quote:
Installed everything 100% correct to manual.
When troubleshooting, it helps me to keep in mind the possibility - however unthinkable

- that I might have made a mistake. If I don't, I just run into dead end after dead end ("it can't be that, everything's correct"). I assume the clutch adjustment procedure on pp. 22-23 of the shop manual has been carried out to the letter?
If two steel plates got put in side by side, the existing plates are worn down to nothing and/or competely glazed, or the springs are super tired, you could get the symptoms you describe; I'm sure there must be other causes as well. Also as mentioned, the oil can have a very big effect on slippage, especially on vintage Honda clutches. I ruined a brand-new set of friction plates once with Mobil 1 synthetic, and now I only use Bel-Ray EXL 10W-40 conventional oil (or similar non-automotive oil) in my gearboxes.
If I pull apart a clutch these days, I always install new OEM plates and heavier Barnett springs if available. I've kicked myself too many times after a reassembled clutch started slipping in a short time.
Ray