I should have mentioned yesterday -
The ports should be smoothed, but not polished, and finished with very fine (1,000 or 2,000 grit) wet or dry with a bit of light oil on it.
Polishing creates turbulence, whereas a smooth surface encourages laminar flow (= more inlet charge).
The key objective here is to smooth the inlet tract, so any gaskets should be trimmed back, and inlet ducts aligned with the inlet ports. This might mean ADDING material such as Devcon, rather than cutting it away.
The idea here is to assemble the engine exactly as the designer intended (AKA 'Blueprinting'), rather than how the assembly line does it.
If you are really keen, the compression ratios of all six cylinders should be matched (by measuring head capacity at TDC), and skimming a fraction off of the piston crowns as required.
You might also check the 'squish band' around the periphery of each piston, using a piece of solder to measure the gap at TDC. Anything more than 25 thou encourages detonation and pre - ignition, but most assembly lines work to much wider clearances for safety. Don’t forget to check the gap between the valves (when fully open) and the piston crowns at TDC too.
Most petrol engines will safely run with much higher compression ratios (= more power for the same amount of fuel) if the squish band is correct.
Many competition engines are blueprinted, rather than 'tuned', as this provides greater power and economy with better reliability. The difficulty is that production lines simply don't allow for this kind of assembly.
NN