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They're listed here: http://outintheshop.com/faq/casting/heads.html.76cc low-compression (8:1) heads. Not the 327/350 heads with 1.94/1.50 intake exhaust valve diameters. Yours have 1.72/1.50 intake exhaust.You can get good torque and good mileage with the right cam.
An 8:1 static compression ratio means 1) that you can run any kind of pump gas you want, and 2) there is a limit to what horsepower and torque you can get out of the engine for a given displacement. If you had a 9.5:1 compression ratio, for example, you have more room to play with cam parameters to get horsepower, but you have to run premium. If you have an 11:1 compression ratio, you can do a lot of crazy things with the cam, but you have to run it on unobtainium or use an additive. This is because as you compress a gas-air mixture it wants to spontaneously ignite, not waiting for the spark. This is called detonation, or knock. It tries to push the piston down when the piston is still coming up, and is very hard on engine components. Octane delays the detonation of gasoline and allows you to compress it more before you light it off with the spark.In general, high compression ratio is more important in designing a winder. It helps some for torque, too, but you can get a lot of torque out of low compression ratios.The size of the valves is one factor determining how much mixture you can flow through the engine, which is one of the limits to horsepower. Basically, the power you get out of an engine depends on how much fuel you can move through it. Bigger valves and cams that facilitate flow give more power. The issue is that the cam setup that increases power at higher rpms, cuts it at lower rpms and vice versa. A torquer down low will not have as much horsepower as a winder up top, but it will have more horsepower and torque at the lower rpms where you drive. It will run out of breath sooner as the engine speeds up, and at higher rpms the winder will have more horsepower an torque. So that's why you pick the cam to match the kind of driving you do, and for most people concentrating on high-end horsepower is the wrong choice.