Port bowl looks good (maybe you mistyped, or it's a nomenclature issue, because in context it sounds like you got what I am saying).
Valve heights, smalve heights... Did I tell you I accidently ran a washer under one of the rocker pedastals for a very long time?
(studs rather than bolts retaining the rocker shaft and assembly in a horribly lit shelter I was paying for by the hour). As long as you set the lash...
(I did, but believed the new cam was ground on a different base circle at the back, for some reason...
)
I think quench is more than a bit over stated- it's nice, but to be the focus of an engine build like some of the kids on TB think of it as, is silly. Displacement, valve lift, cam duration being suited to what you do with it, CR& duration being in sync with each other... all kinds of basics make power ahead of the small effect quench has.
I'm talking too much. OK.
Basically, the air forms (more or less) a cone around the valve, as the inertia the air has (taking it across the back of the valve) is counteracted by the fact the air is being
pulled in [tends to cause the well documented effect of the air taking the low path: the short side], so the effects largely cancel out (especially on the b20 head which has a decently tall intake bowl, and, arguably, a
problematically tall short side).
At a combination of open throttle+high RPM, you are going to see more air pass the long side, and at part throttle you will see the reverse.
You most likely knew most or all of that.
Fuel, being heavier, is more likely to take the long side (ie. its balance of inertia-to-pull being different due to density).
So the important part to shape smoothly is the quadrant opposite the intake port. Personally I think you should take *a lot* out of there, even if it means paying to have the head milled substantially to shrink your chamber volume back down (actually a good thing being that it tends to "unshroud the valves vertically")
That said, there is new information the last few years that the NASCAR and esp ProStock guys have been privy to for quite some time, indicating that there is a very nice quench effect available that is lost on most porters....
[possibly the best quench effect], that being that the slim area between the intake valve and the bore (90* to the port centerline) should be left as quench area if the head has material there. The idea is to create a push away of gases near the intake valve rim, which is where detonation/preignition begins. So, ideally, go "long", not "wide" on the intake side, if you follow. You might lose a few CFM restricting the cone of flow there, but your burn is so much better...
One of the thing I have been meaning to do is load a couple hundred pictures to Flickr- the site enable call outs to different points on the photo.
While I don't have all the answers, I think it could become a great resource, and place of discussion [viewers can, in turn, call-out points on photo]. Maybe someday.
If you want to email me @
iadr@hotmail.com, and can accept a large file, I'll ZIP you up a few hundred photos you can look over. I don't know how available I can promise to be to answer questions, but the photos are sequenced by the main focus of each photo: chamber, intake, and exhaust, and within that by "effort"[ie. how much changed from stock] on a scale of 1 to 5, so are to some degree self-explanatory
BTW, having slept on it, I think that between the customer service nightmare, the fact that the work is at least as much done on the intake as exhaust (which differs from initial 'offer', as you noted), this was a nicely ported head that he had available to ship, not specifically one made for you. Not a bad thing, though, you may have gotten nicer port work than "intended".
Again, I am rambling, but the point I was going to make is that it looks suspiciously like he did a stage 2/3 port work, and never got to the chamber and just decided to ship it... so chamber work is hardly a rethink of the head, merely finishing it!
As a side point, I'd also have a machine shop enlarge the pushod holes, or offset them to the rocker shaft side, because increased rocker ratio is the way to go.
Not to rethink the project for you, but displacement addition and getting the cam right for what you do, and running maximum rocker ratio are, as a package, much more effective than porting.