The valves will need to stay matched to their guides still in an ideal world but lapping will make them seal, "dropped" is the only way they must have come out, i wasnt working on it.........
Cleaning starts
photo(56) by
Deanxm, on Flickr
Inlet port view (nice)
photo(62) by
Deanxm, on Flickr
Exhaust port view (poor effort)
photo(58) by
Deanxm, on Flickr
So far as freeing up flow in the exhaust goes im not sure, in the picture above you can see the stepped ridge behind the valve seat, i may be able to open this up and smooth it in but this is material the valve seat is set against and i dont want to weaken it, the main issue is the shape of the port around the valve guid, its like a flat ceiling parallel to the valve seat and whatever you do it just a bad shape, i can open up the port at the mating face of the manifold to match the sizes but i need to increase port diameter by 7mm to do this and most of the restriction is exhaust valve size, the square flat wall behind the valve and the 90 degree turn the port must make, it will make me feel better though and im sure with such a massive restriction there is better flow to be had, i would guess if you could free up half a horse per cylinder with 6 cylinders there is scope for improvement.
Movement in collet shown with right collet held in place and left collet moved all the way down, i did get them out in the end by carefully cleaning the collet seating area with fine wet and dry to remove the burr, not sure if i want to put those inlet valves back in though......2.0i ones are a smaller diameter by a few mm so they cant be swapped either.
photo(60) by
Deanxm, on Flickr
And all the way up
photo(61) by
Deanxm, on Flickr
Camshaft
photo(59) by
Deanxm, on Flickr