Pete I'll do you one better and take a few photos of the internal mods to the jug, case and piston of a reed valve setup with a third transfer port and piston port window.... as compared to a milder engine with just the basic skirted and ramped piston, with enlarged and matched ports and transfer ports slightly enlarged and smoothed.
I've also found a couple of motor sources that feature balanced cranks and use grade 8 head bolts, so I don't bother with doing this myself anymore. Also the decks are accurately machined so that step is no longer necessary. I also use copper head gasket. Buying a good base motor is the most important step in the whole process as some of the kits are pure crap to build on. I'm not about touting vendors, but I can PM the ones I buy from cost about $125. to $150. short block with basic mods so fifty or sixty dollars more than unknown vendor block & worth it to me.
I use the SHA Dellorto slide carb and 6 cc aluminum aftermarket heads, bigger the better for cooling more than for power, though power is increased, NGK plug & solid copper wire, after market ignition on the performance motors that retard advance at high rpm (opposite of 4 stroke theory) depending on the exhaust used the highly modified engines come on pipe at 8,000 to 9,500 rpm with 12,000 to 13,000 topped. No matter how well these motors are built they won't live long operating at plus 10,500 rpm, but fun to run up for a short burst.
I run a 48 tooth final sprocket and 26" tire so I'm really geared low on the bike I spoke of in the previous post and it pulls well from dead stops and pulls long hills well without overheating, super dependable. I really like these little motors and don't usually build out for max power, but it's pretty easy to double stock power with minor mods and triple with more mods and much tuning. I don't have a dyno and don't necessarily believe vendor claims, but know it takes several extra hp to get past the true stock mph limits on a kit bike. Rick C.