Replacing the head will not do anything for a smoking engine, sounds like the valve guides are leaking a bit, it's really not an issue for most people - unlikely the owner wants to throw more money at it if it's doing what you say
I'm sure the owner would be quite happy at this point but he has some weird shop owner who wants it perfect and is going to put a lot more time and money into it or at least drive this tech nuts without even consulting the customer and seeing how happy is the situation currently which is what he should do.Replacing the head will not do anything for a smoking engine, sounds like the valve guides are leaking a bit, it's really not an issue for most people - unlikely the owner wants to throw more money at it if it's doing what you say
I have a fairly High hour woods mow n machine that's really a grasshopper with an underpowered bridge vanguard 12 horsepower or maybe it's a 14 but I think it's a 12 with a 44 inch deck and they should have stuck with the 16 they did a lot of or even the 18th but I run straight 40 Valvoline vr1 racing all in that because of the extra high zinc content.That too, good old 30w, lets not worry about gas mileage!! Seals & oil!
At this point I don't think the owner has any idea what's going on other than the mower isn't fixed yet.just for what it is worth, if valve guides are worn on any engine, no valve job will seal properly because the valve will not stay centered in the seat. All one is doing is cleaning things up a bit.
That said, this horse has been pretty beat down. If the owner complain still about smoke then it is a classic promised more than could deliver. Dreaming of restoring a machine with lots of hours to what it was like when new is just not viable these days.
Within minutes, I can tell how good a mechanic is on these small engines of walking into a shop. Believe it or not, many shops don’t know what they are doing! I’ve done small engines for 35 years. I was in it from the old school of points and condensers and that 2 strokes always used reed valves. My instructor back then in college stated “ if you don’t know the secrets of the engine, you will never fix it” and he was right! The valves are the most important thing, but are always over looked. As you own a shop, the next time that you get a smoker engine or one that runs with a surge, take the valves out and have a look. I agree with you in using a wire brush on the cylinder head to clean them up, but the valves, I use emery cloth. I have not used valve lapping compound in over 25 years as I got that good at doing valves.Now you know you're going to make some people's heads spin around talking about cleaning up valves and even daring to mention touching the sealing surface with something so unprecise as your finger!!!
I don't actually think I've used Emery cloth on them or sandpaper but I have used the fairly fine wire brush on the grinding wheel to clean them up I do however, recommend using some course grit lapping compound and then some fine grit lapping compound and lap them decently in the head once you do this because you're probably going to round off the sharp angles a little bit even though cleaning up the crap and making the surface smooth probably outweighs any problems you could cause by getting the angles off a little but then when you go and lap them you will be increasing the sealing ability quite a bit.
When I officially opened my shop in 2011 I looked around and thought about buying one of the old school valve grinding apparatuses but found out they're still pretty expensive and I'm a cheapskate and there's not really that big of a demand or need to do it and I don't rebuild inches anyways and most of those jobs that would require that are simply too labor intensive and time involved for me to bother doing when I can sit here all day long doing annual services and carb cleanouts and make a lot more money in less time and help a lot more people overall.
So I gave up on the idea but if I'm ever at a garage sale somewhere and see one that they're basically giving away I will pick it up.
The only time in my life I ever actually used one was in junior high school in the metals and small engine class where are we did a complete rebuild and ground the valves whether they needed it or not.
The fact is, lawn mowers are low performance little turds!
This makes them very forgiving and you just don't see that many burnt valves or valves that really need to be ground.
You find far more popped valve seats and way more slipped valve guides causing valve train issues but it's not the actual valve cut angle sealing surface at all.
I'm sure it works fine for you and like I said, cleaning up deposits and other crap like that and the carbon buildup probably far outweighs any slight variation of the margin and the sealing surface from the angles being a little off or not quite as crisp .Within minutes, I can tell how good a mechanic is on these small engines of walking into a shop. Believe it or not, many shops don’t know what they are doing! I’ve done small engines for 35 years. I was in it from the old school of points and condensers and that 2 strokes always used reed valves. My instructor back then in college stated “ if you don’t know the secrets of the engine, you will never fix it” and he was right! The valves are the most important thing, but are always over looked. As you own a shop, the next time that you get a smoker engine or one that runs with a surge, take the valves out and have a look. I agree with you in using a wire brush on the cylinder head to clean them up, but the valves, I use emery cloth. I have not used valve lapping compound in over 25 years as I got that good at doing valves.